Soil depth and habitat degradation can reshape fungal communities in salt-affected wetlands, but their effects on fungal ecological processes remain insufficiently understood. This study examined soil fungi in the Halahai Provincial Nature Reserve and adjacent converted farmland in the western Songnen Plain, Northeast China, where salt-affected meadow soils correspond mainly to Solonetz. Four habitat types—reed wetland, meadow steppe, degraded Suaeda saline patch, and converted farmland—were sampled at 0–20 cm and 20–40 cm soil depths. Soil properties, fungal diversity, taxonomic composition, environmental associations, niche breadth, assembly processes, and FUNGuild-based trophic modes were analyzed using ITS sequencing. Degraded Suaeda soils showed the strongest salinity–alkalinity stress, with pH values of 10.34–10.30 and electrical conductivity of 1.70–1.75 dS·m−1. Fungal richness was highest in surface-converted farmland, with a Sobs value of 423.33, and lowest in deeper degraded Suaeda soil, with a Sobs value of 86.00. Ascomycota dominated most groups, especially degraded Suaeda soils, where its relative abundance reached 75.29–76.80%. ANOSIM confirmed significant community dissimilarity among habitat-depth groups (R = 0.56878, p = 0.001). Specialists accounted for 68.07% of fungal taxa, and stochastic processes, especially drift and dispersal limitation, contributed substantially to assembly. These results indicate that soil depth, salinity–alkalinity, and habitat conversion jointly regulate fungal community structure and ecological processes in degraded soda saline–alkali wetlands.
Ding et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
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