Abstract

Underground coal mining can result in land deformation (e.g., land subsidence and ground fissures), and may consequently change the soil nutrients. Soil organic matter (SOM), total nitrogen (TN), and available phosphorus (AP) are critical indicators of soil fertility and eco-restoration in mining areas. In this study, soil samples (depth: 0–20 cm) were collected twice from 20 sampling points in pre-mining and post-mining in the No.12 panel of Caojiatan coalfield, in the Loess Plateau of China. SOM, TN, and AP in soil samples were measured, and the nutrient loss was evaluated. Ten environmental factors affecting soil nutrient loss were identified from a 5-m resolution digital elevation map (DEM). The paired t-test was utilized to evaluate the differences between SOM, TN, and AP in pre-mining and post-mining soil. The mechanisms of the effects of environmental factors on soil nutrient loss were revealed based on multiple linear regression, redundancy analysis (RDA), and the random forest algorithm (RF). Ordinary kriging and RF were utilized to predict and optimize the spatial distribution of the soil nutrient loss. The results showed that significant differences existed between the SOM, TN, and AP in the pre-mining and post-mining soil. The model established by RF provided a higher accuracy in terms of fitting the correlation between soil nutrient loss and environmental factors compared to the model established by multiple linear regression, and the feature importance obtained by RF showed that profile curvature, distance to working panel margin, and surface roughness were the most significant factors affecting the loss of SOM, TN, and AP, respectively. This study provides a theoretical reference for eco-restoration, as well as soil and water conservation, in subsided lands in coalfields.

Highlights

  • This study analyzed the effects of environmental factors on soil nutrient loss in topsoil under land deformation in the Caojiatan coalfield

  • Significant differences were found between Soil organic matter (SOM), total nitrogen (TN), and available phosphorus (AP) in pre-mining soil and post-mining soil

  • The soil nutrients at 20 measured points all decreased after the mining disturbance, demonstrating severe destruction of the soil fertility caused by mining activities

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Summary

Introduction

More than 90% of coal in China is obtained through underground mining, and this mode of resource extraction causes significant destruction to the ecological system and land environment [12,13,14]: the root system and environment of microbes is destroyed, the soil material and soil nutrients are lost or reduced, the cycling of the soil nutrients is less efficient, the availability of soil microelements is reduced, and the ecological balance is destroyed [15,16,17] This destruction is not self-healing under the conditions of mining disturbance [18]

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