Vegetation restoration profoundly impacts soil carbon (C)-nitrogen (N)-phosphorus (P) cycling in arid sandy lands, with vegetation type critically regulating accumulation patterns. However, the magnitudes of soil nutrients and stoichiometry for different vegetation types are still largely unknown. Thus, we conducted a regional-scale study to evaluate the soil nutrients and nutrient stoichiometry under four typical vegetation types in the Mu Us Sandy Land (MUS), including monoculture arbor (MA), monoculture shrub (MS), arbor-shrub mixed (MAS), and monoculture herbaceous (MH), with cropland (Cr) and bare sand (Bs) controls. Our results showed that vegetation type significantly affected SOC and TN content. MS (30–40 years), MA (>40 years), and MH exhibited significant increases of 285.5–305.8% in SOC and 293.6–374.6% in TN in the topsoil, respectively. MS (30–40 years) and MH demonstrated increases of 399.1% and 283.3% in SOC and 250.2% and 162.8% in TN in the subsoil. However, MAS had no significant effect on SOC and TN. MA (>40 years) resulted in a higher TP in the subsoil. Compared to Bs, humic substances significantly increased by 111.1–171.6% under MA (>40 years), MS (>40 years), and MH, exhibiting positive correlations with SOC. Moreover, MAS treatment resulted in a higher C:N, while the MH resulted in a higher C:P and N:P in the topsoil. Despite stable total phosphorus (TP), elevated C:P and N:P ratios under MH indicated emerging P limitation in restoration. Therefore, long-term monoculture shrub, arbor, and herbaceous vegetation effectively enhances soil fertility in arid sandy lands through long-term SOC accumulation and humic substance formation.
Zhang et al. (Wed,) studied this question.