Microbial taxonomic diversity and functional genes mirror soil ecosystem multifunctionality in nonferrous metal mining areas
["Zheng, Meng-yao","Qi, Xiao-jun","Liu, Zhi-yue","Wang, Yi-ting","Ren, Yan-bo","Li, Yuan","Zhang, Yue","Chai, Bao-feng","Jia, Tong"]
2025-07-15
期刊论文
The pollution of metal ions triggers great risks of damaging biodiversity and biodiversity-driven ecosystem multifunctioning, whether microbial functional gene can mirror ecosystem multifunctionality in nonferrous metal mining areas remains largely unknown. Macrogenome sequencing and statistical tools are used to decipher linkage between functional genes and ecosystem multifunctioning. Soil samples were collected from subdams in a copper tailings area at various stages of restoration. The results indicated that the diversity and composition of soil bacterial communities were more sensitive than those of the fungal and archaeal communities during the restoration process. The mean method revealed that nutrient, heavy metal, and soil carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus multifunctionality decreased with increasing bacterial community richness, whereas highly significant positive correlations were detected between the species richness of the bacterial, fungal, and archaeal communities and the multifunctionality of the carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus functional genes and of functional genes for metal resistance in the microbial communities. SEM revealed that soil SWC and pH were ecological factors that directly influenced abiotic factor-related EMF; microbial diversity was a major biotic factor influencing the functional gene multifunctionality of the microbiota; and different abiotic and biotic factors associated with EMF had differential effects on whole ecosystem multifunctionality. These findings will
来源平台:JOURNAL OF HAZARDOUS MATERIALS