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Fig. 2 | Microbiome

Fig. 2

From: Near full-length 16S rRNA gene next-generation sequencing revealed Asaia as a common midgut bacterium of wild and domesticated Queensland fruit fly larvae

Fig. 2

Rank abundance plot of OTUs with more than 50 sequences in Bactrocera tryoni larvae sampled. Larvae were sampled from wild or domesticated populations. (a) Most abundant OTU with regards to number of sequences. (b) Next 2-14 most abundant OTUs. The rank followed by the OTU number (de_novo refers to OTUs from aligning input sequences that failed to find a match to the reference collection), followed by taxonomy assigned to that OTU in brackets, is listed. Where possible taxonomic assignment is at the genus level, otherwise the family level is provided and indicated with an “f” at the start of the name. Above each column are letters to indicate the family that the OTU belongs to (Ac = Acetobacteraceae; Le = Leuconostocaceae; En = Enterobacteriaceae, Ha = Halomonadaceae; Ps = Pseudomonadaceae)

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