Theofilidou Aphrodite, Zafeiriou Ioannis, Kekelis Panagiotis, Aschonitis Vassilis, Gasparatos Dionisios, Monokrousos Nikolaos
University Center of International Programmes of Studies, International Hellenic University, 57001, Thessaloniki, Greece.
Soil and Water Resources Institute, Hellenic Agricultural Organization-Dimitra, 57001, Thessaloniki, Greece.
Environ Monit Assess. 2025 Aug 9;197(9):1000. doi: 10.1007/s10661-025-14435-2.
This study explores the effect of nickel contamination on the nematode community and assesses whether the presence of olive plants mitigates its impact. Soil samples were collected from both olive-cultivated and bare plots across a gradient of nickel concentrations (40, 70, and 120 ppm) in a Mediterranean agroecosystem. The results indicate that, even at high nickel concentrations (120 ppm), the presence of olive plants promoted the nematode community, while lower concentrations (40 ppm) favored the proliferation of bacterivorous nematodes (i.e., Panagrolaimus). The genus Ditylenchus exhibited resilience and dominance regardless of plant presence, while Aphelenchus also showed high abundance. Furthermore, plant presence maintained significantly higher biodiversity at 120 ppm compared to the intermediate concentration (70 ppm) in plant-absent conditions. In bare soils at 120 ppm Ni, nematode populations were entirely absent, while olive-cultivated soils still supported diverse communities, indicating a strong plant-mediated buffering effect. Diversity profiles and functional indices (maturity, enrichment, and structure index) revealed that olive trees not only buffered the negative effects of nickel but also promoted a more functionally diverse and stable nematode community, shifting dominance from fungivores to bacterivores at lower Ni concentrations. Multivariate analyses further demonstrated that both deterministic (Ni toxicity) and stochastic (plant-driven microhabitat heterogeneity) processes shaped community assembly, with olive trees enhancing resilience under stress. These findings highlight the importance of integrating plant-mediated remediation strategies in managing heavy metal-polluted soils and support the use of soil nematode communities as sensitive bioindicators for soil health assessment under environmental stress.
本研究探讨了镍污染对线虫群落的影响,并评估了橄榄树的存在是否能减轻其影响。在地中海农业生态系统中,沿着镍浓度梯度(40、70和120 ppm),从种植橄榄的地块和裸地采集了土壤样本。结果表明,即使在高镍浓度(120 ppm)下,橄榄树的存在也促进了线虫群落的发展,而较低浓度(40 ppm)则有利于食细菌线虫(即类杆线虫属)的增殖。无论是否有植物存在,茎线虫属都表现出恢复力和优势,而滑刃线虫属也具有较高的丰度。此外,与无植物条件下的中间浓度(70 ppm)相比,在120 ppm时,植物的存在显著维持了更高的生物多样性。在镍浓度为120 ppm的裸土中,线虫种群完全不存在,而种植橄榄的土壤仍然支持多样化的群落,这表明植物具有强大的缓冲作用。多样性图谱和功能指数(成熟度、富集度和结构指数)表明,橄榄树不仅缓冲了镍的负面影响,还促进了功能更丰富、更稳定的线虫群落,在较低镍浓度下,优势从食真菌线虫转向食细菌线虫。多变量分析进一步表明,确定性(镍毒性)和随机性(植物驱动的微生境异质性)过程共同塑造了群落组装,橄榄树增强了胁迫下的恢复力。这些发现凸显了在管理重金属污染土壤中整合植物介导的修复策略的重要性,并支持将土壤线虫群落用作环境胁迫下土壤健康评估的敏感生物指标。