Conversion of the Amazon rainforest to agriculture results in biotic homogenization of soil bacterial communities
The University of Texas at Arlington · Universidade de São Paulo · +4 more institutions
Abstract
The Amazon rainforest is the Earth’s largest reservoir of plant and animal diversity, and it has been subjected to especially high rates of land use change, primarily to cattle pasture. This conversion has had a strongly negative effect on biological diversity, reducing the number of plant and animal species and homogenizing communities. We report here that microbial biodiversity also responds strongly to conversion of the Amazon rainforest, but in a manner different from plants and animals. Local taxonomic and phylogenetic diversity of soil bacteria increases after conversion, but communities become more similar across space. This homogenization is driven by the loss of forest soil bacteria with restricted…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 18.62
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 48
Authors
13Topics & keywords
- Biodiversity
- Amazon rainforest
- Rainforest
- Ecosystem
- Agroforestry
- Tropical rainforest
- Phylogenetic diversity
- Ecology
- Life in Land