Degree of urbanization and vegetation type shape soil biodiversity in city parks

Haifeng Yao, Zhipeng Li, Stefan Geisen, Zhihong Qiao, Martin F. Breed, Xin Sun

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

11 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Urbanization negatively impacts aboveground biodiversity, such as bird and insect communities. City parks can reduce these negative impacts by providing important habitat. However, it remains poorly understood how the degree of urbanization and vegetation types within city parks (e.g., lawns, woodland) impact soil biodiversity. Here we investigated the impact of the degree of urbanization (urban vs. suburban) and vegetation type (lawn, shrub-lawn, tree-lawn and tree-shrub mixtures) on soil biodiversity in parkland systems. We used eDNA metabarcoding to characterize soil biodiversity of bacteria, fungi, protists, nematodes, meso- and macrofauna across park vegetation types in urban and suburban regions in Xiamen, China. We observed a strong effect of the degree of urbanization on the richness of different soil biota groups, with higher species richness of protists and meso/macrofauna in urban compared to suburban areas, while the richness of bacteria and fungi did not differ, and the difference of nematode richness depended on vegetation type. At the functional level, increased degree of urbanization associated with greater species richness of bacterivores, plant pathogens and animal parasites. These urbanization effects were at least partly modulated by higher soil phosphorous levels in urban compared to suburban sites. Also, the vegetation type impacted soil biodiversity, particularly fungal richness, with the richness of pathogenic and saprotrophic fungi increasing from lawn to tree-shrub mixtures. Tree-shrub mixtures also had the highest connectedness between biotas and lowest variation in the soil community structure. Overall, we show that soil biodiversity is strongly linked to the degree of urbanization, with overall richness increasing with urbanization, especially in bacterivores, plant pathogens and animal parasites. Targeted management of vegetation types in urban areas should provide a useful way to help mitigate the negative effect of urbanization on soil biodiversity.
Original languageEnglish
Article number166437
Number of pages11
JournalScience of The Total Environment
Volume899
Early online date19 Aug 2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 15 Nov 2023

Keywords

  • Cross-biota associations
  • Functional groups
  • Soil biodiversity
  • Urban green spaces
  • Urbanization
  • Vegetation type

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