“…Studying various factors that affect the host gut microbial assembly and structure, elucidating the dynamic shifts in diversity and composition of microbes, and analyzing the host′s gut microbial adaptive mechanisms in reaction to various external disturbances are important for protecting amphibians. In the past 30 years, research on the association between amphibians and their gut microbial composition has mainly focused on the order Anura, such as Xenopus tropicalis, Rana dybowskii, Bufo gargarizans, Pelophylax nigromaculatus, and Fejervarya limnocharis (Chai et al, 2022;Huang et al, 2021;Huang et al, 2022;Li et al, 2020;Tong et al, 2020a;Xu et al, 2020;Zhang et al, 2023;Zhao et al, 2022;Zheng et al, 2021;Zhu et al, 2023), while only a few studies have focused on the order Caudata (Jiang et al, 2022;Li et al, 2022;Lv et al, 2022;Mu et al, 2018). Although knowledge about environmental factors driving shifts in the gut microbiota of amphibians is constantly being supplemented, the understanding of the external environment on the composition, source, and dynamic shifts of the gut microbiota of Caudata is still limited.…”