Dataset for effects of the transition from dry forest to pasture on diversity and structure of bacterial communities in Northeastern Brazil

The data included in this article supplement the research article titled “Forest-to-pasture conversion modifies the soil bacterial community in Brazilian dry forest Caatinga (manuscript ID: STOTEN-D-21-19067R1)”. This data article included the analysis of 18 chemical variables in 36 composite sample...

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Published inData in brief Vol. 41; p. 107842
Main Authors Costa, Diogo Paes da, Araujo, Ademir Sérgio Ferreira, Pereira, Arthur Prudêncio de Araujo, Mendes, Lucas William, França, Rafaela Felix da, Silva, Thallyta das Graças Espíndola da, Oliveira, Julyana Braga de, Araujo, Jenifer Sthephanie, Duda, Gustavo Pereira, Menezes, Rômulo Simões Cezar, Medeiros, Erika Valente de
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Netherlands Elsevier Inc 01.04.2022
Elsevier
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Summary:The data included in this article supplement the research article titled “Forest-to-pasture conversion modifies the soil bacterial community in Brazilian dry forest Caatinga (manuscript ID: STOTEN-D-21-19067R1)”. This data article included the analysis of 18 chemical variables in 36 composite samples (included 4 replicates) of soils from the Microregion of Garanhuns (Northeast Brazil) and also partial 16S rRNA gene sequences from genomic DNA extracted from 27 of these samples (included 3 best quality replicates) for paired-end sequencing (up to 2 × 300 bp) in Illumina MiSeq platform (NCBI - BioProject accession: PRJNA753707). Soils were collected in August 2018 in a tropical subhumid region from the Brazilian Caatinga, along with 27 composite samples from the aboveground part of pastures to determine nutritional quality based on leaf N content. The analysis of variance (ANOVA) and post-hoc tests of environmental data and the main alpha-diversity indices based on linear mixed models (LMM) were represented in the tables. In this case, the collection region (C1 – Brejão, C2 – Garanhuns, and C3 – São João) was the random-effect variable and adjacent habitats formed by a forest (FO) and two pastures (PA and PB succeeded by this forest) composed the fixed-effect variable (land cover), both nested within C. In addition, a table with similarity percentages breakdown (SIMPER) was also shown, a procedure to assess the average percent contribution of individual phyla and bacterial classes. The figures showed the details of the study location, sampling procedure, vegetation status through the Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI), in addition to the general abundance and composition of the main bacterial phyla.
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ISSN:2352-3409
2352-3409
DOI:10.1016/j.dib.2022.107842