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Fig. 6 | Animal Microbiome

Fig. 6

From: The yellow perch (Perca flavescens) microbiome revealed resistance to colonisation mostly associated with neutralism driven by rare taxa under cadmium disturbance

Fig. 6

Statistical analysis of the node degree in the water and host-microbiome networks. The comparison of connectivity assessed with nodes degrees and represented with violin plots indicate that the average of connections is significantly higher in the skin compared to the water and gut microbiomes in all treatments and at all time points. However, at T1 the connectivity converged (which means not significantly different) between the water and skin microbiome for cadmium-treated groups. The average of nodes’ degree computed with Network Analyzer was compared using the Kruskal-Wallis test followed by Benjamini-Hochberg test. The value of 0.05 is the threshold of B-H p-value significance. Only the significant Dunn test p-values for pairwise comparisons are displayed on this figure, however in order to improve visibility, the significant p-values of Kruskal-wallis test for multiple groups comparisons were not plotted

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