Publication | Open Access
Distance-Decay Relationships Partially Determine Diversity Patterns of Phyllosphere Bacteria on Tamrix Trees across the Sonoran Desert
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Citations
34
References
2012
Year
EngineeringSonoran DesertPhylogeneticsMolecular EcologyBiogeographyTamrix TreesMicrobial EcologySoil MicrobiologyEnvironmental MicrobiologyRrna GeneMicrobial DiversityBiodiversityDispersal LimitationCommunity CompositionMicrobial SystematicsTerrestrial BiotaMicrobiologyPhyllosphere BacteriaMedicineForest Microbiome
Dispersal limitation in phyllosphere communities was measured on the leaf surfaces of salt-excreting Tamarix trees, which offer unique, discrete habitats for microbial assemblages. We employed 16S rRNA gene pyrosequencing to measure bacterial community dissimilarity on leaves of spatially dispersed Tamarix specimens in sites with uniform climatic conditions across the Sonoran Desert in the Southwestern United States. Our analyses revealed diverse bacterial communities with four dominant phyla that exhibited differential effects of environmental and geographic variables. Geographical distance was the most important parameter that affected community composition, particularly that of betaproteobacteria, which displayed a statistically significant, distance-decay relationship.
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