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https://hdl.handle.net/10316/111613
Title: | Soil contamination in nearby natural areas mirrors that in urban greenspaces worldwide | Authors: | Liu, Yu-Rong van der Heijden, Marcel G A Riedo, Judith Sanz-Lazaro, Carlos Eldridge, David J. Bastida, Felipe Moreno-Jiménez, Eduardo Zhou, Xin-Quan Hu, Hang-Wei He, Ji-Zheng Moreno, José L. Abades, Sebastian Alfaro, Fernando Bamigboye, Adebola R. Berdugo, Miguel Blanco-Pastor, José L. de Los Ríos, Asunción Durán, Jorge Grebenc, Tine Illán, Javier G. Makhalanyane, Thulani P. Molina-Montenegro, Marco A. Nahberger, Tina U. Peñaloza-Bojacá, Gabriel F. Plaza, César Rey, Ana Rodríguez, Alexandra Siebe, Christina Teixido, Alberto L. Casado-Coy, Nuria Trivedi, Pankaj Torres-Díaz, Cristian Verma, Jay Prakash Mukherjee, Arpan Zeng, Xiao-Min Wang, Ling Wang, Jianyong Zaady, Eli Zhou, Xiaobing Huang, Qiaoyun Tan, Wenfeng Zhu, Yong-Guan Rillig, Matthias C. Delgado-Baquerizo, Manuel |
Issue Date: | 27-Mar-2023 | Publisher: | Nature Communications | metadata.degois.publication.title: | Nature Communications | metadata.degois.publication.volume: | 14 | metadata.degois.publication.issue: | 1 | Abstract: | Soil contamination is one of the main threats to ecosystem health and sustainability. Yet little is known about the extent to which soil contaminants differ between urban greenspaces and natural ecosystems. Here we show that urban greenspaces and adjacent natural areas (i.e., natural/semi-natural ecosystems) shared similar levels of multiple soil contaminants (metal(loid)s, pesticides, microplastics, and antibiotic resistance genes) across the globe. We reveal that human influence explained many forms of soil contamination worldwide. Socio-economic factors were integral to explaining the occurrence of soil contaminants worldwide. We further show that increased levels of multiple soil contaminants were linked with changes in microbial traits including genes associated with environmental stress resistance, nutrient cycling, and pathogenesis. Taken together, our work demonstrates that human-driven soil contamination in nearby natural areas mirrors that in urban greenspaces globally, and highlights that soil contaminants have the potential to cause dire consequences for ecosystem sustainability and human wellbeing. | URI: | https://hdl.handle.net/10316/111613 | ISSN: | 2041-1723 | DOI: | 10.1038/s41467-023-37428-6 | Rights: | openAccess |
Appears in Collections: | I&D CFE - Artigos em Revistas Internacionais |
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Soil-contamination-in-nearby-natural-areas-mirrors-that-in-urban-greenspaces-worldwideNature-Communications.pdf | 3.8 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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