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Fig. 3 | Microbiome

Fig. 3

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. 3

Relative abundance of bacterial taxa in Bactrocera tryoni larval midguts. Near full-length sequences were clustered at 99% similarity. Sequences belonging to OTUs from the same genus or family (when genus could not be determined due to the representative OTU sequence matching to 16S rRNA gene sequences from various genera with similar identity) were pooled. The group “Other” includes OTUs with five or less sequences and does not belong to the other families listed. The prefixes Bux, Tum, FFPF, GPII, and MQ refer to the source of samples, and P and Col indicate whether the larva was from a peach or a domesticated colony, respectively. Larvae from the same peach have the same letter before the larval number. For example, Bux.P.A1, Bux.P.A2, and Bux.P.A3 were different larvae from the same whole peach. The number of near full-length sequences included in the OTU clustering for each sample is listed above the respective column

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