# A non-lethal method for the sampling of the gut microbiota in Betta splendens

**Authors:** Ka Ieng Pun, Vasana Jinatham, Muhammad Bashir Saidu, Manuel Sapage, Siam Popluechai, André Antunes, Kritsakorn Saninjuk, David Gonçalves

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fvets.2026.1702535 · Frontiers in Veterinary Science · 2026-02-05

## TL;DR

Researchers found that non-lethal mouth swabbing can effectively sample gut microbiota in Siamese fighting fish, offering an ethical alternative to lethal methods.

## Contribution

This study introduces a non-lethal sampling method for gut microbiota in Betta splendens, enabling longitudinal behavioral studies.

## Key findings

- Non-lethal mouth swabbing showed comparable alpha diversity to lethal gut sampling in Betta splendens.
- Swab samples revealed additional microbial taxa potentially unique to the upper gut.
- Phylogenetic metrics showed significant compositional differences between sampling methods.

## Abstract

The gut microbiota is known to modulate brain function and behavior but the underlying mechanisms are still poorly understood. In particular, research on the impact of gut microbiota in aggressive behavior is scarce. The Siamese fighting fish (Betta splendens) has been increasingly used for studies of aggression but methodologies for gut microbiota-aggression studies are lacking for the species. Here, we compared the gut microbial diversity in B. splendens using a conventional lethal gut sampling technique and a non-lethal mouth swabbing method. Bacterial communities were profiled by 16S rRNA gene sequencing targeting the V3–V4 region. Alpha diversity analyses, including observed amplicon sequence variants (ASV), Shannon diversity index, Chao1 richness estimator, and Faith’s phylogenetic diversity, revealed no statistically significant differences between sampling methods when compared using Kruskal–Wallis and Wilcoxon rank-sum tests. Beta diversity analyses using Bray–Curtis dissimilarity index through PERMANOVA also held comparative results, although phylogenetically informed metrics, such as weighted UniFrac and generalized UniFrac, revealed significant compositional divergence between the two sampling methods, with the swab collection method holding generally higher values. The swab method identified most of the microbial groups also identified by lethal gut sampling, plus some additional taxa that are potentially only present in the upper gut. Taken together, our findings support the use of non-lethal mouth swabbing as a viable and ethically preferred alternative to traditional sampling of the intestine for characterizing the gut microbiota of B. splendens. This technique, first applied in a small fish, may be particularly valuable in longitudinal studies to assess changes in gut microbiota in relation to aggression in B. splendens, enabling repeated sampling over time to investigate how microbial community dynamics correlate with the development, expression, or modulation of aggressive behavior.

## Linked entities

- **Species:** Betta splendens (taxon 158456)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** aggression (MESH:D010554), intestinal pathogen infection (MESH:D007410), inflammatory (MESH:D007249), died (MESH:D003643)
- **Chemicals:** luminal (MESH:D010634), lipid (MESH:D008055), cellulose (MESH:D002482), BCAA (MESH:D000597), MS-222 (MESH:C003636), SCFA (MESH:D005232), DF (MESH:D004043), vitamin K (MESH:D014812), carbohydrate (MESH:D002241)
- **Species:** Bacillota (clostridial firmicutes, phylum) [taxon 1239], Pseudomonas (RNA similarity group I, genus) [taxon 286], Plesiomonas (C 27 Group, genus) [taxon 702], Candidatus Epulonipiscium (genus) [taxon 2383], Rhinella marina (cane toad, species) [taxon 8386], Rickettsiales (rickettsias, order) [taxon 766], Artemia salina (species) [taxon 85549], Sphaerotilus (genus) [taxon 34102], Aeromonas (genus) [taxon 642], gut metagenome (species) [taxon 749906], Sphingobium (genus) [taxon 165695], Sceloporus virgatus (species) [taxon 43639], Terriglobia (class) [taxon 204432], Danio rerio (leopard danio, species) [taxon 7955], Burkholderiales (order) [taxon 80840], Betta splendens (Siamese fighting fish, species) [taxon 158456], Struthioniformes (ostriches, order) [taxon 8798], Cutibacterium (genus) [taxon 1912216], Bacteria Latreille et al. 1825 (Bacteria stick insect, genus) [taxon 629395], Flavobacterium (genus) [taxon 237], Oncorhynchus mykiss (rainbow trout, species) [taxon 8022], Swionibacillus (genus) [taxon 2033476], Candidatus Neoarthromitus (genus) [taxon 49082], Struthio camelus (African ostrich, species) [taxon 8801], Clostridium (genus) [taxon 1485]

## Full text

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## Figures

6 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12917903/full.md

## References

75 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12917903/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12917903