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Spatial patterns and environmental functions of dissolved organic matter in grassland soils of China

Environmental Studies and Forestry

Spatial patterns and environmental functions of dissolved organic matter in grassland soils of China

P. Zhou, L. Tian, et al.

Explore the intriguing spatial distribution of dissolved organic matter in grassland soils across China, revealing fascinating correlations with environmental functions. This compelling study by Peng Zhou, Long Tian, Nigel Graham, Shian Song, Renzun Zhao, Muhammad Saboor Siddique, Ying Hu, Xianyong Cao, Yonglong Lu, Menachem Elimelech, and Wenzheng Yu highlights the diverse roles of soil DOM and emphasizes the need for tailored strategies.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Soil dissolved organic matter (DOM) is crucial to atmospheric, terrestrial and aquatic environments as well as human life. Here, by characterizing DOM from 89 grassland soils throughout China, we reveal the spatial association between DOM geochemistry in the dry season vs annual ecosystem exchange and cancer cases. The humic-like and high molecular weight (3.4–25 kDa) fractions with lower biodegradability, decline from the northern to the southern regions of China, and are correlated with lower soil respiration and net ecosystem productivity at the continental scale. The <1.2 kDa and proteinaceous fractions could serve as a geographical indicator of nasopharyngeal cancer incidence and mortality, while the 3.4–25 kDa and humified fractions are potentially associated with pancreatic cancer cases (P<0.05). Our findings highlight that exploiting the environmental functions of soil DOM and mitigating the negative impacts are necessary, and require actions tailored to local soil DOM conditions.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Jul 28, 2024
Authors
Peng Zhou, Long Tian, Nigel Graham, Shian Song, Renzun Zhao, Muhammad Saboor Siddique, Ying Hu, Xianyong Cao, Yonglong Lu, Menachem Elimelech, Wenzheng Yu
Tags
dissolved organic matter
grassland soils
China
environmental functions
soil respiration
nasopharyngeal cancer
ecosystem productivity
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