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Changes in land use alter the structure of bacterial communities in Western Amazon soils
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Here we show how agricultural practices by indigenous peoples as well as forest recovery relate to
the structure and composition of Amazon soil bacterial communities. Soil samples were collected in
different land use systems and bacterial community composition and diversity were explored by
T-RFLP, cloning and sequencing, and data were analyzed with multivariate techniques. The main
differences in bacterial community structure were related to changes in the soil attributes that, in
turn, were correlated to land use. Community structure changed significantly along gradients of
base saturation, [Al3 þ] and pH. The relationship with soil attributes accounted for about 31% of the
variation of the studied communities. Clear differences were observed in community composition as
shown by the differential distribution of Proteobacteria, Bacteroidetes, Firmicutes, Acidobacteria
and Actinobacteria. Similarity between primary and secondary forest communities indicates the
recovery of bacterial community structure during succession. Pasture and crop soil communities
were among the most diverse, showing that these land use types did not deplete bacterial diversity
under the conditions found in our sites.
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JESUS, E. da C. et al. Changes in land use alter the structure of bacterial communities in Western Amazon soils. Microbial Population and Community Ecology, [S. l.], v. 3, p. 1004-1011, 2009.
