Corrigendum: Diversity and Function of Wolf Spider Gut Microbiota Revealed by Shotgun Metagenomics

[This corrects the article DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2021.758794.].


A Corrigendum on Diversity and Function of Wolf Spider Gut Microbiota Revealed by Shotgun Metagenomics
by Wu, R., Wang, L., Xie, J., and Zhang, Z. (2021). Front. Microbiol. 12:758794. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2021.758794 In the original article Abstract, there was the following error: Approximately 27.3% of the gut microbiota of P. agraria comprises Proteobacteria, and approximately 34.5% of the gut microbiota of P. laura comprises Firmicutes.
The following correction has been applied: Approximately 27.3% of the gut microbiota of P. agraria comprises Proteobacteria, and approximately 34.4% of the gut microbiota of P. laura comprises Firmicutes.
In the original article Figure 4 legend, contained the following errors: Ras guanyl-nuxleotide exchange factor activity should be changed to "Ras guanyl-nucleotide exchange factor activity," and intracellular receptor signaling patway should be changed to "intracellular receptor signaling pathway." In the original article, MATERIALS AND METHODS, Assembly-Free Metagenomic Profiling, Metagenome Assembly, Gene Prediction, and Annotation: there was the following error: Quality control of metagenomic sequencing data was performed using MultiQC v1.5 (Ewels et al., 2016) with parameter -t 20.
The following correction has been applied: Quality control of metagenomic sequencing data was performed using FastQC v0.11.8 1 with parameter -t 20 and MultiQC v1.10.1 (Ewels et al., 2016) with parameter -d. 1 http://www.bioinformatics.babraham.ac.uk/projects/fastqc/ In the original article RESULTS, Identification of Microbiota From the Reads of Spider Metagenomes, there were the following errors: The most abundant gut microbiota in P. agraria were bacteria, accounting for 99.68%, followed by archaea and viruses accounting for 0.3 and 0.02%, respectively (Figure 2A). In the gut of P. laura, bacteria, archaea, and viruses accounted for 97.4, 2, and 0.6%, respectively ( Figure 2B).
The following correction has been applied: The most abundant gut microbiota in P. agraria were bacteria, accounting for 99.64%, followed by archaea and viruses accounting for 0.34 and 0.02%, respectively (Figure 2A). In the gut of P. laura, bacteria, archaea, and viruses accounted for 97.56, 1.8, and 0.64%, respectively ( Figure 2B).
The authors apologize for the errors and state that this does not change the scientific conclusions of the article in any way. The original article has been updated.
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