Host species and captivity distinguish the microbiome compositions of a diverse zoo-resident non-human primate population

HIGHLIGHTS

  • who: Maya O. Wills et al. from the Department of Biology, Macalester College, Saint Paul, MN, USA Department of Computer Science and Engineering, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA have published the research: Host Species and Captivity Distinguish the Microbiome Compositions of a Diverse Zoo-Resident Non-Human Primate Population, in the Journal: Diversity 2022, 715 of /2022/
  • what: The authors characterize the gut microbiome composition of a phylogenetically diverse cohort of NHPs residing in the same urban zoo. The authors show that despite overlapping and controlled environmental contexts gut microbiomes are still distinguished between . . .

     

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