| Literature DB >> 21124923 |
Newton C M Gomes1, Daniel F R Cleary, Fernando N Pinto, Conceição Egas, Adelaide Almeida, Angela Cunha, Leda C S Mendonça-Hagler, Kornelia Smalla.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Mangrove forests are of global ecological and economic importance, but are also one of the world's most threatened ecosystems. Here we present a case study examining the influence of the rhizosphere on the structural composition and diversity of mangrove bacterial communities and the implications for mangrove reforestation approaches using nursery-raised plants. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPALEntities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 21124923 PMCID: PMC2989908 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0014065
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Diversity analyses of rhizosphere samples from nursery (Nur), transplanted (Trn) and native (Nat) Rhizophora mangle plants and from the bulk sediment (Bul).
A) Dominance-diversity plots. Each panel plots logarithmic species abundance against the rank order of species for each sample. The blue horizontal lines represent observed (raw) data. The red and yellow lines represent the best fits, namely Zipf and Zipf-Mandelbrot models respectively. The best fits were obtained with the ‘radfit()’ function in the vegan library in R. B) Species rarefaction curve of each sample data set using; error bars represent a single standard deviation.
Figure 2Principal coordinates (PCO) analysis of operational taxonomic unit (OTU) composition.
The first two axes of a PCO ordination are shown based on a matrix of OTU composition of rhizosphere samples from nursery (Nur), transplanted (Trn) and native (Nat) Rhizophora mangle plants and from the bulk sediment (Bul). Grey symbols represent individual OTU's where the size of the symbol corresponds to its total abundance (see legend in plot). Coloured symbols represent sample sites where the size corresponds to OTU richness.
Figure 3Relative abundance of the most dominant bacterial groups.
Each panel plots the relative abundance of different bacterial taxa inhabiting rhizosphere samples from nursery (Nur), transplanted (Trn) and native (Nat) Rhizophora mangle plants and bulk sediments (Bul). All classes are shown where the relative abundance in at least one treatment exceeds 1% (first three rows). The eight most abundant classified orders of Proteobacteria are also shown (last two rows). Symbols above the bars represent significant deviations (*** P<0.001, ** 0.001
Figure 4Ternary plots showing the ratio's of the most abundant operational taxonomic units (OTU's) across treatments [rhizosphere samples of nursery (Nur), transplanted (Trn), native Rhizophora mangle (Nat) and bulk sediment (Bul)].
Ratio's in rhizosphere (Nur, Trn and Nat) treatments (A) and mangrove (Trn, Nat and Bul) treatments (B) are shown. Numbers identify individual OTU's (see Table 1). In ternary plots each corner of the triangle represents a proportion of 100% for a given treatment with the other corners representing 0% of that treatment. As the proportion of a given treatment increases in a sample then it moves towards the corner representing that treatment.
Taxonomic assignment of partial 16S rRNA gene sequences of dominant bacterial populations (operational taxonomic units ≥50 reads) and their known putative ecophysiological traits.
| OTU code/number of reads | Sequence classification | Known traits |
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| The Alphaproteobacteria comprise several plant symbionts. In this study several OTU's assigned to this class were related to rhizobia ( |
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| Only a few |
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| Members of this order are best known from soils and plant rhizospheres. They are well known as efficient degraders of complex biopolymers (e.g. lignocellulose, keratin, and chitin). Only recently the actinomycetes were recognized as autochthonous marine microbiota |
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| Members of this phylum consist of facultatively aerobic, filamentous bacteria and are presumably involved in the degradation of carbohydrates and amino acids. |
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The codes in bold refer to the OTUs' code followed by the number of sequences reads assigned to each OTU.
Sequences were assigned up to the lowest taxonomic rank with at least 50% bootstrap support.