Additional file 1 of The succession pattern of soil microbial communities and its relationship with tobacco bacterial wilt Jiaojiao Niu Zhongwen Rang Chao Zhang Wu Chen Feng Tian Huaqun Yin Linjian Dai 10.6084/m9.figshare.c.3629495_D1.v1 https://springernature.figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Additional_file_1_of_The_succession_pattern_of_soil_microbial_communities_and_its_relationship_with_tobacco_bacterial_wilt/4419092 Figure S1. Rarefaction curves of 16r RNA gene sequencing data. Figure S2. Composition and structure of soil microbial communities in each group. Figure S3. Phylogenetic molecular ecological networks (pMEN) of microbial communities in each group, and number of nodes and links of each pMEN. Table S1. Soil properties. Table S2(a). Correlation of microbial populations in abundance between two periods at the phylum level. (b). Correlation of microbial populations in abundance between two periods at the genus level. Table S3. Topological properties of the empirical pMENs of microbial communities in eight groups. Table S4(a). Correlation between abundance of microbial populations and tobacco morbidity at the phylum level. (b). Correlation between abundance of microbial populations and tobacco morbidity at the genus level. Table S5(a). Mantel test of sequencing data with environmental attributes at the phylum level. (b). Mantel test of sequencing data with environmental attributes at the genus level. (DOCX 1100 kb) 2016-10-06 05:00:00 Soil microbial communities Succession mechanism Crop health Illumina sequencing Molecular ecological network