Abstract

Vegetation restoration can effectively improve the ecological environment of mining areas, enhance the ecological service function, and promote the carbon sequestration and sink increase in the ecosystem. The soil carbon cycle plays an important role in the biogeochemical cycle. The abundance of functional genes can predict the material cycling potential and metabolic characteristics of soil microorganisms. Previous studies on functional microorganisms have mainly focused on large ecosystems such as farmland, forest, and wetland, but relatively little attention has been paid to complex ecosystems with great anthropogenic interference and special functions, such as mines. Clarifying the succession and driving mechanism of functional microorganisms in reclaimed soil under the guidance of vegetation restoration is helpful to fully explore how functional microorganisms change with the change in abiotic and biotic conditions. Therefore, 25 topsoil samples were collected from grassland (GL), brushland (BL), coniferous forests (CF), broadleaf forests (BF), and mixed coniferous and broadleaf forests (MF) in the reclamation area of the Heidaigou open pit waste dump on the Loess Plateau. The absolute abundance of soil carbon cycle functional genes was determined using real-time fluorescence quantitative PCR to explore the effect of vegetation restoration on the abundance of carbon cycle-related functional genes in soil and its internal mechanism. The results showed that:â‘  the effects of different vegetation restoration types on the chemical properties of reclaimed soil and the abundance of functional genes related to the carbon cycle were significantly different (P<0.05). GL and BL showed significantly better accumulation of soil organic carbon, total nitrogen, and nitrate nitrogen (P<0.05) than that in CF. â‘¡ The gene abundance of rbcL, acsA, and mct was the highest among all carbon fixation genes. The abundance of functional genes related to carbon cycle in BF soil was higher than that in other types, which was closely related to the high activity of ammonium nitrogen and BG enzymes and the low activity of readily oxidized organic carbon and urease in BF soil. The functional gene abundance of carbon degradation and methane metabolism was positively correlated with ammonium nitrogen and BG enzyme activity and negatively correlated with organic carbon, total nitrogen, readily oxidized organic carbon, nitrate nitrogen, and urease activity (P<0.05). â‘¢ Different vegetation types could directly affect soil BG enzyme activity or affect soil nitrate nitrogen content, thus indirectly affecting BG enzyme activity, in turn manipulating the abundance of functional genes related to the carbon cycle. This study is helpful to understand the effects of different vegetation restoration types on the functional genes related to the carbon cycle in the soil of mining areas on the Loess Plateau and provides a scientific basis for ecological restoration and ecological carbon sequestration and sink enhancement in mining areas.

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