Abstract

Soil nutrients are critical indicators of land reclamation effects and play significant roles in soil restoration in degraded mining areas; however, few studies have analyzed the characteristics and variations in soil nutrients after reclamation in ecologically fragile regions on the Loess Plateau. To analyze the spatial and temporal variations in reclaimed soil nutrients, an experimental field was established in an inner reclaimed dump consisting of four land use types (cultivated land (CL), forestland (FL), grassland (GL), and barren land (BL)) in the Antaibao mine on the Loess Plateau of China. Sampling was conducted in 2013 and 2017, with 78 and 81 sampling points, respectively. The soil available phosphorus (SAP), soil available potassium (SAK), soil total nitrogen (STN) and soil organic matter (SOM) contents at depths of 0–20 cm were measured at each sampling point, and the variations in soil nutrients were analyzed using two-way multivariate analysis of variance, geostatistical analysis, and correspondence analysis. This study revealed the following: (1) All the reclaimed soil nutrients tested increased between 2013 and 2017. (2) There were significant differences in the SAP, SAK, STN and SOM contents among land use types and reclamation ages, and land use type and reclamation age had an interaction effect on the reclaimed soil nutrients. (3) The spatial distributions of the SAP, SAK, STN and SOM contents in 2017 were significantly different from those in 2013 but were almost consistent with the distributions of soil nutrient changes between 2013 and 2017. (4) The most improved SAP, SAK, STN and SOM (SAP-VI, SAK-VI, STN-VI, and SOM-VI) were predominantly distributed in the GL, and there was no obvious trend for the other land use types. These findings are significant for the restoration of reclaimed soil nutrients and provide reasonable land use type options for land reclamation in coal mining areas, especially in ecologically fragile areas on the Loess Plateau.

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