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. 2020 Apr 14;5(2):e00495-19. doi: 10.1128/mSystems.00495-19

FIG 1.

FIG 1

Microbial community structure of global desert soils. The map is generated by ArcGIS 10.6 and shaded by global aridity index, a ratio of mean annual precipitation to potential evapotranspiration (160) modeled by Antonio Trabucco and Robert Zomer (161). The relative abundances of major microbial groups in 20 desert (nonbiocrust) soils from Africa (162, 163), Antarctica (77, 132, 164), Asia (165170), Australia (171), Europe (172), North America (47, 77, 173), and South America (13) are displayed in pie charts and in Table S1 in the supplemental material. Phyla with a <1% relative abundance were grouped into the category “Other.” Actinobacteria is the most abundant phylum detected in bare soils (25.5%), followed by Proteobacteria (21%), Acidobacteria (6.5%), Bacteroidetes (6%), Chloroflexi (2.5%), and Firmicutes (2%) (median values of the 20 samples are shown in Table S1). Cyanobacteria, though abundant in soil biocrusts and lithic niches, are present in less than 1% in most bare soil samples.