Alpine wetlands are highly sensitive to climate warming and anthropogenic disturbances such as grazing, highlighting the urgent need to identify operational indicators for monitoring soil functional changes. In this study, the Zequ National Wetland Park on the Qinghai–Tibet Plateau was selected as the study area. At the plot scale (n = 66), vegetation structure (aboveground biomass, vegetation height, and coverage), soil nutrient properties (soil organic carbon (SOC), total nitrogen (TN), total phosphorus (TP), ammonium nitrogen (NH4+–N), nitrate nitrogen (NO3−–N), available phosphorus (AP)), soil enzyme activities (β-glucosidase (BG), N-acetylglucosaminidase (NAG), and acid phosphatase (ACP)) were measured simultaneously. Spearman correlation analysis and redundancy analysis (RDA) were applied to examine their statistical relationships. Descriptive statistics revealed pronounced variability among plots, with aboveground biomass ranging from 115.43 to 1505.27 g·m−2, AP from 0.75 to 70.23 mg·kg−1, and BG activity from 0.25 to 14.71 μmol·g−1·h−1, indicating strong spatial heterogeneity in alpine wetlands. Both correlation and RDA results consistently showed that nutrient availability—particularly inorganic nitrogen and AP—was more closely associated with soil enzyme activities, whereas total nutrient contents exhibited a relatively limited ability to explain short-term variations in soil functional processes. These findings suggest that a combined indicator framework integrating nutrient availability and soil enzyme activities has strong potential for the early detection of soil quality changes and degradation in alpine wetlands, thereby providing quantitative support for sustainable wetland management and restoration assessment.
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Guoning Jing
Qinghai University
Changhui Li
Zhongyang Yu
Qinghai University
Sustainability
Qinghai University
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Jing et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69b4fc0eb39f7826a300ca8a — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/su18062735