Abstract
This study investigated phase-dependent changes in gut microbiome composition, predicted functional potential, and lipid metabolism in intensively reared broiler chickens and ducks across the starter, grower, and finisher phases (from day-old to 42 days of age), over six production cycles (four chicken and two duck cycles), using 16S rRNA sequencing and blood lipids profiling. A total of 70 pooled manure samples were collected (46 from chickens and 24 from ducks), along with 34 blood samples (22 from chickens and 12 from ducks), all obtained under standard production conditions. Microbial diversity remained stable across growth phases within each species, whereas clear interspecies differences were observed (p < 0.01). Microbiome maturation involved a shift from early facultative and environmentally associated taxa during the starter phase (day-old to 14 days of age), including Acinetobacter (p < 0.01) and Enterococcus (p < 0.001), toward a more stable, host-adapted community. At the level of predicted functional pathways, shifts between growth phases were more pronounced in ducks. Predicted gene-level profiles showed phase-specific differentiation in chickens, with starter-associated genes linked to core carbon and nitrogen metabolism and finisher-associated genes related to structural and transport functions, whereas ducks exhibited a more balanced reorganization involving carbohydrate, energy, and nitrogen metabolism. Host lipid profiles between adjacent growth phases showed dynamic shifts in ducks (p < 0.05). These species-specific lipid patterns were mirrored by microbiome–lipid associations, as demonstrated by correlation analyses between dominant bacterial genera and blood lipid parameters, revealing more coordinated relationships in chickens and more heterogeneous patterns in ducks. Overall, these findings demonstrate species-specific organization of gut microbiome changes and their integration with blood lipid profiles under intensive production conditions.