Ag Data Commons
Browse

File(s) stored somewhere else

Please note: Linked content is NOT stored on Ag Data Commons and we can't guarantee its availability, quality, security or accept any liability.

A consistent and predictable commercial broiler chicken bacterial microbiome in antibiotic-free production displays strong correlations with performance

dataset
posted on 2023-11-30, 08:15 authored by Timothy J. Johnson, Bonnie P. Youmans, Sally Noll, Carol Cardona, Nicholas Evans, Peter Kernezos, John Ngunjiri, Michael Abundo, Chang-Won Lee

Defining the baseline bacterial microbiome is critical towards understanding its relationship with health and disease. In broiler chickens, numerous studies have aimed at defining the core microbiome, yet the core and its possible relationships with health and disease have been difficult to define due to lack of study power. Here, the most comprehensive microbiome-based effort to date in commercial broilers was undertaken. The primary goals of this study included understanding what constitutes core in the broiler gastrointestinal, respiratory, and barn environments; how these core players change across age, geography, and time; and which bacterial taxa correlate with enhanced bird performance in antibiotic-free flocks. Using 2,309 samples from 37 different commercial flocks within a vertically integrated broiler system, and metadata from 549 flocks within that system, the baseline bacterial microbiome was defined. The effects of age, sample type, flock, and successive flock cycles were compared, and results indicate a consistent, predictable, age-dependent bacterial microbiome, irrespective of flock. The tracheal bacterial microbiome of broilers was comprehensively defined for the first time, and interestingly, Lactobacillus was the dominant bacterial taxa in the trachea. Numerous bacterial taxa were identified which were strongly correlated with broiler chicken performance, across multiple tissues. While many positively correlated taxa were identified representing targets for future probiotic development, many negatively associated potential pathogens were identified in the absence of clinical disease, indicating subclinical dynamics occurring that impact performance. Overall, this work provides necessary baseline data for the development of effective antibiotic alternatives for sustainable poultry production.

This dataset includes forward and reverse raw sequencing reads for 2,309 broiler chicken gut, respiratory, and litter samples surveyed using 16S amplicon profiling.


Resources in this dataset:

Funding

National Institute of Food and Agriculture, 2016-67015-24911

National Institute of Food and Agriculture, 2015-68004-23131

History

Data contact name

Johnson, Timothy J.

Data contact email

tjj@umn.edu

Publisher

University of Minnesota

Temporal Extent Start Date

2016-03-01

Temporal Extent End Date

2016-11-30

Theme

  • Not specified

ISO Topic Category

  • biota

National Agricultural Library Thesaurus terms

Minnesota; broiler chickens; microbiome; statistics; poultry; United States; data collection; genomics; gastrointestinal system; barns; geography; birds; flocks; Lactobacillus; tissues; probiotics; antibiotics; poultry production; funding; microorganisms; computer software; issues and policy; Biological Sciences; Business and Industry

Pending citation

  • No

Public Access Level

  • Public

Preferred dataset citation

Johnson, Timothy J; Youmans, Bonnie P; Noll, Sally; Cardona, Carol; Evans, Nicholas; Kernezos, Peter; Ngunjiri, John; Abundo, Michael; Lee, Chang-Won. (2018). A consistent and predictable commercial broiler chicken bacterial microbiome in antibiotic-free production displays strong correlations with performance. Retrieved from the Data Repository for the University of Minnesota, https://doi.org/10.13020/D63T10.