Abstract

Contaminated soil at smelting sites affects land utilization and environmental regulation, resulting in soil degradation. However, the extent to which potentially toxic elements (PTEs) contribute to site soil degradation and the relationship between soil multifunctionality and microbial diversity in the process remains poorly understood. In this study, we investigated changes in soil multifunctionality and the correlation between soil multifunctionality and microbial diversity under the influence of PTEs. The change in microbial community diversity was closely related to changes in soil multifunctionality caused by PTEs. Microbial diversity, not richness, drives the delivery of ecosystem services in smelting site PTEs-stressed environments. Structural equation modeling identified that soil contamination, microbial taxonomic profile and microbial functional profile could explain 70% of the variance in soil multifunctionality. Furthermore, our findings demonstrate that PTEs limit soil multifunctionality by affecting soil microbial communities and functionality, whilst the positive effect of microorganisms on soil multifunctionality was mainly driven by the fungal diversity and biomass. Finally, specific fungal genera closely related to soil multifunctionality were identified, with saprophytic fungi being particularly important for maintaining multiple soil functions. The results of the study provide potential guidance for the remediation, pollution control practices and mitigation of degraded soils at smelting sites.

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