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Architectural Design Drives the Biogeography of Indoor Bacterial Communities

Figure 4

Dust communities within a building cluster by space type and are strongly correlated with building centrality and human occupancy.

Points represent centroids (±SE) from distance based redundancy analysis (DB-RDA). Space types hold significantly different communities (P = 0.005), though this is driven primarily by restrooms. Bacterial OTUs that have the strongest influence in sample dissimilarities are shown at the margins; numbers in parentheses indicate multiple OTUs in the same genus. Centrality (along y-axis) represents network betweenness and degree; human occupancy (along x-axis) represents annual occupied hours and human diversity. All four correlates (simple linear models as a factor of ordination axis) are significant along their respective axes (all P<0.001).

Figure 4

doi: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0087093.g004