Urbanized lands degrade surrounding grasslands by deteriorating the interactions between plants and soil microbiome

Front Microbiol. 2025 Jan 6:15:1505916. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2024.1505916. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

To mitigate overgrazing on grasslands, towns were constructed in some pastoral regions of China to relocate pastoralists. Nevertheless, whether and how the urbanized lands impact the surrounding grassland ecosystem remains unclear. We assessed the impacts of urbanized lands on the plant and soil interactions within the surrounding grasslands in order to ensure an eco-sustainable pastoralist relocation. The town with 1 km radius was selected as urbanization sample and a grassland with 1 km radius was selected as nature grassland sample. Plants and soil were investigated in nature grassland (NG), and areas 1 km (T-1 km), 2 km (T-2 km), and 3 km (T-3 km) from the center of the town. In T-1 km and T-2 km, compared to the NG, plant diversity, the abundance of dominant plant species, the abundance of soil wood saprotroph fungi, soil water content (SWC), and total organic carbon (TOC) decreased, while soil plant pathogen fungi, soil pH, and total phosphatase (TP) increased. Conversely, no such changes were observed in T-3 km. The results of Mantel test and Partial least squares path model suggest that the decrease in soil TOC and SWC, along with the increase in pH and TP in T-1 km and T-2 km, lead to a decline in wood saprotroph fungi and an increase in plant pathogen fungi, ultimately resulting in reductions in plant diversity and the abundance of dominant plant species. These results indicate that towns in pastoral areas can lead to surrounding grassland degradation by deteriorating the plant-soil interactions.

Keywords: degradation; grassland ecosystem; plant community; soil microbial community; urbanization.

Grants and funding

The author(s) declare financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. This study was supported by the Key laboratory of Ecology and Environment in Minority Area, National Ethnic Affairs Commission (KLEEMA202207) for the research and received no specific grant from any public and commercial funding agencies.