Science Inventory

INFLUENCE OF DIET ON THE PERFORMANCE OF BOVINE FECAL POLLUTION DETECTION METHODS AND MICROBIAL POPULATION STRUCTURE

Citation:

SHANKS, O. C., K. M. WHITE, SAM HAYES, C. A. KELTY, M. SIVAGANESAN, M. Jenkins, AND M. Sogin. INFLUENCE OF DIET ON THE PERFORMANCE OF BOVINE FECAL POLLUTION DETECTION METHODS AND MICROBIAL POPULATION STRUCTURE. Presented at International Society for Microbial Ecology 12th International Symposium on Microbial Ecology, Cairns;Queensland, AUSTRALIA, August 17 - 22, 2008.

Impact/Purpose:

Poster Presentation

Description:

ABSTRACT Background and Aims. Waterborne diseases originating from bovine fecal material are a significant public health issue. Ensuring water quality requires the use of methods that can consistently identify pollution across a broad range of management practices. One practice that is often overlooked is animal diet. Different diet regimes are known to have a significant impact on rumen microbial ecology. Shifts in rumen microbial population structure influenced by diet may also impact fecal microbial communities and the performance of bovine fecal pollution detection methods. Methods. Seven PCR assays (4 end-point; 3 quantitative) that target Bacteroidetes 16S rRNA or Bacteroidetes-like chromosomal genes were tested with randomly selected individual bovine fecal samples from pasture (n=60), corn grain (n=60), and distiller grain (n=30) fed animals representing five test populations. Fecal samples were obtained by digital retrieval from the rectum of each animal. A massive parallel sequence strategy was used to characterize the microbial population structure from individual fecal samples (n=4) representing different diet types. Results. The number of positive detections from each population using end-point PCR assays ranged from 0% to 100%. Abundance of quantitative PCR target DNA varied between pasture and corn fed diets (p<0.05). More than 100,000 sequence tags provided a detailed microbial population profile that allowed us to compare the effects of different diet types. Conclusions. Different diet regimes can have a drastic influence on the performance of bovine fecal detection methods. Study results demonstrate the importance of diet and characterizing microbial population structure when developing fecal source tracking methods.

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( PRESENTATION/ POSTER)
Product Published Date:08/22/2008
Record Last Revised:06/09/2008
OMB Category:Other
Record ID: 191705