“…Finally, we found only weak shifts in gut microbiota composition within the flock over the nonbreeding season, and individual stints underwent large, seemingly random, fluctuations in their gut microbiota composition and diversity, demonstrating a remarkably changeable microbiota within individuals even during sedentary periods. Such dramatic shifts have also been found in other wild species such as anolis lizards (Ren, Kahrl, Wu, & Cox, ) and baboons (Ren, Grieneisen, Alberts, Archie, & Wu, ), suggesting microbial fluctuations in community composition, potentially in response to short‐term shifts in host diet or physiology, may be the norm in wild animals, independent of being sedentary or migratory. However, our findings suggest these changes are likely to be due to short‐term shifts in diet or physiology, rather than exposure to altered environmental microbiota.…”