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Above- and below-ground biodiversity responses to the prolonged flood pulse in central-western Amazonia, Brazil

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Abstract

Abstract Amazonia encompasses forests that grow in areas that are periodically inundated by overflowing rivers. The inundation depth and duration vary according to the slope of the terrain, creating a flooding gradient. This gradient directly affects the biota, but the effect on soil organisms remains elusive. Here, we use DNA metabarcoding to estimate prokaryote and eukaryote diversity from soil and litter samples in a seasonally flooded forest and its adjacent unflooded forest in central-western Amazonia using 16S and 18S gene sequences, respectively. We characterize the below-ground diversity and community composition based on Amplicon Sequence Variants (ASVs) along the flooding gradient. We test for the relationship of soil biota with the flooding gradient, soil properties and above-ground woody plant diversity. The flooding gradient did not explain below-ground biodiversity. Nor was the below-ground diversity explained by the above-ground woody plant diversity. However, we found taxonomic groups not previously reported in Amazonian seasonally flooded forests. Also, the flooding gradient and woody plant diversity did, in part, explain the community composition of soil bacteria. Although the effects of the flooding gradient, soil properties and above-ground woody plant diversity is hard to quantify, our results thus indicate that flood stress could influence below-ground bacterial community composition.

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