Ottawa Citizen

THE ONE-TRICK KOALA

Researcher­s working to counter the dietary dilemma of the Aussie marsupial

- JASON BITTEL

Move over, salmon cannon. Step aside, panda pornograph­y. There’s a new tool in the world of wildlife conservati­on that highlights just how profoundly humans have messed up natural ecosystems and the dramatic steps we must take now to correct them. And that tool is koala poop transplant­s.

Fecal transplant­s — which involve taking helpful bacteria and inserting them into patients by way of a capsule or an enema — have made headlines in recent years for their use in treating intractabl­e C. diff infections in humans. Some researcher­s also think tweaking the microbiome, in the form of encapsulat­ed feces, might help us better tackle ailments including pancreatic cancer, melanoma and obesity. But koalas?

It starts with the marsupials’ picky eating habits. Koalas survive on nothing but eucalyptus leaves. And though they have been known to consume 10 varieties of the plant, a species called manna gum is the koala’s favourite.

This preference has led to some problems.

Thanks to habitat destructio­n by humans, koalas often find themselves in isolated islands of eucalyptus, said Ben Moore, an ecologist at the Hawkesbury Institute for the Environmen­t at Western Sydney University.

“And that sort of enables over-browsing to occur and the trees to get destroyed,” he said.

In 2013, a koala population in Cape Otway, Australia, plucked the leaves off every manna gum tree in the area, triggering a die-off of trees and koalas. Over the next two years, about 70 per cent of the approximat­ely 8,000 animals in the area perished. That was bad news for a species considered vulnerable to extinction by the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature.

The tragic thing is that near all the stripped manna gum trees, there was plenty of another kind of eucalyptus. Known as messmate, it’s considered less nutritious, but it’s eucalyptus all the same. “Some koalas eat nothing but messmate,” Moore said.

Many of the Cape Otway koalas wouldn’t touch the stuff and starved to death, with the messmate trees in plain view. Moore thought it might have something to do with the marsupial’s microbiome.

To chip away at the mystery, Moore and his colleagues analyzed the feces of koalas that fed exclusivel­y on manna gum and compared it with those that prefer messmate. This confirmed a hunch — that koala microbiome­s vary by population and contain different species of bacteria depending on the kinds of eucalyptus they consume.

Next, the team captured 12 wild koalas from a manna gum forest in Cape Otway. A control group received fecal transplant­s — poop pills, basically — from animals that fed on manna gum. The others got fecal transplant­s from wild-caught koalas living in, and dining on, messmate. The payloads were delivered via specially designed capsules that could stay intact until they reached the koala’s hindguts, where their eucalyptus-munching microbes live.

After nine days of coaxing the koalas to swallow the pills and another 18 days monitoring them, the team found that the microbiome­s of the animals in the control group didn’t really change. But the bacteria found inside those that received messmate microbes changed a lot.

The presence of bacteria associated with messmate digestion skyrockete­d, said Michaela Blyton, an ecologist at the University of Queensland and the lead author of a paper describing the findings.

Most important was that the koalas that had been seeded with the new bacteria actually went on to eat more messmate than the control group.

“We know through human studies and work in other animals that the diet influences the compositio­n of the microbiome,” Blyton said. “And our evidence suggests that it may go the other way as well.”

Blyton and Moore’s study is the first to provide evidence that fecal transplant­s can establish a new bacterial regime in koalas, which in turn helps the animals exploit a different food source.

The fecal transplant­s Blyton and Moore are pioneering might have helped wildlife managers save some of the Cape Otway koalas in 2013, and targeted probiotics clearly would be useful for zoos. But the technology may have wider applicatio­ns.

As human developmen­t encroaches on koalas’ natural habitat in Australia, more of the marsupials are being struck by cars or attacked by dogs and are ending up in veterinary clinics. About half of the nation’s koalas are also infected with a strain of chlamydia, which can cause blindness or genital tumours. In other words, koala hospitals never want for patients.

“And the first thing that happens when a koala is brought into a koala hospital is they get a big shot of antibiotic­s, and of course that disrupts their microbiome,” Moore said. “So the hope now is that by using a modified version of this approach, it will give us a way to improve the number of koalas that recover from these sorts of treatments and get them back out there, where they need to survive if population­s are going to persist.” The Washington Post

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Koalas survive on nothing but eucalyptus leaves. In fact, they have been known to consume 10 varieties of the plant. A species called manna gum is the koala’s favourite.
GETTY IMAGES Koalas survive on nothing but eucalyptus leaves. In fact, they have been known to consume 10 varieties of the plant. A species called manna gum is the koala’s favourite.

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