4.7 Article

The Coupling Relationship between Herb Communities and Soil in a Coal Mine Reclamation Area after Different Years of Restoration

Journal

FORESTS
Volume 13, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/f13091481

Keywords

mining area; understory herbs; species diversity; coupling coordination

Categories

Funding

  1. National Key Research and Development Plan [2016YFC0501602, 2016YFC0501705]
  2. China Institute of Water Resources and Hydropower Research (IWHR) Research & Development Support Program [SC0145B012022, SC0202A012018]
  3. Ordos Key Water Conservancy Science and Technology Project [2022-2130310-XX]
  4. Shaanxi Natural Science Basic Research Project [2021JQ626]
  5. National Natural Science Foundation of China [32060297, 31370541]

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This study investigated the relationship between herbaceous plant communities and soil factors in a mining area in Inner Mongolia. The results showed that the diversity of herbaceous plants increased with restoration years and was closely related to the available nitrogen and water content in the soil. It is recommended to strengthen the control of water and nitrogen resources and carry out artificial management in later stages of vegetation construction in mining areas.
In a complete organic ecosystem restoration in mining areas, soil and vegetation complement and influence each other. It is of great significance to evaluate the ecological restoration effect on and ecosystem stability of the mining area, with the coupling and coordinating relationship between herb community and soil physicochemical properties after land reclamation. Therefore, this study takes Juxinlong Coal Mine in Dongsheng District of Ordos City, Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region as the study area. The understory herbaceous plant community and soil factors with restoration time of 3 to 7 years were selected as the research objects. In addition, artificial grassland and natural restoration grassland were used as controls to investigate the species composition of herbaceous communities and soil physicochemical properties in different sites. The grey relational coupling model was adopted not only to study the relationship between herb community and soil factors but also to explore the coupling mechanism between herb community and soils' physicochemical properties. The results included: (1) 51 herbaceous plants were investigated in the study area, among which Gramineae, Compositae, Leguminosae, and Chenopodiaceae were the primary ones, accounting for 70% of the total. (2) With the increase of restoration years, the diversity indices of understory herbaceous plants generally showed an increasing trend, but the diversity indices of understory herbaceous plants with different restoration years was smaller than that of artificial grassland. (3) The results of grey correlation analysis showed that the diversity of herbaceous plant community in the study area was closely related to soils' available nitrogen and water content. (4) The degree of coupling and coordinating between the diversity of herbaceous plants and soils in the study area presented a trend of first increasing then decreasing during the accumulating restoration years. Among them, the degree of coupling between the diversity of understory herbaceous plants and soil system in the 5-year restoration's sample plot (0.73) was found to be the highest, which was classified as medium coordination. The lowest coupling degree of herb diversity and soils was identified in the artificial grassland (0.51), which was light incoordination. Therefore, it is suggested that the control of water and nitrogen resources should be strengthened, the herbaceous vegetation should be reasonably selected, and the artificial tending should be carried out in the later stage of understory herbaceous vegetation construction in the study area to better promote the vegetation construction in the mining area.

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