Bacterial communities are poorer at urban park entrances in Finland than Russian Tatarstan: Testing the core presumption of the biodiversity hypothesis
Manninen, Juulia; Roslund, Marja; Saarenpää, Mika; Luukkonen, Anna; Laitinen, Olli; Galitskaya, Polina; Sinkkonen, Aki (2025-11)
Manninen, Juulia
Roslund, Marja
Saarenpää, Mika
Luukkonen, Anna
Laitinen, Olli
Galitskaya, Polina
Sinkkonen, Aki
11 / 2025
Urban Forestry and Urban Greening
129060
Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:tuni-202510139831
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:tuni-202510139831
Kuvaus
Peer reviewed
Tiivistelmä
Urban green spaces are known to host diverse microbiota and provide beneficial ecosystem services for humans. Several studies have shown that exposure to environmental microbiota is lower among urbanites in Western lifestyle countries than in the former Eastern bloc, which has been linked to differences in lifestyle and urban environmental factors. Surprisingly, no studies have yet investigated whether urban green spaces host similar microbiota between countries which have different socio-economical backgrounds. To fill this gap, we sampled surface soil microbiota at urban park entrances in four cities with similar climates in Finland and Russian Tatarstan. We hypothesized to find richer and more diverse microbiota, core microbiome, and indicator species assemblage in Russian Tatarstan. We also hypothesized that park maintenance practices are different between the two countries, which is connected to soil microbiota. The results confirmed all the hypotheses and since we evaluated park characteristics, we were able to connect the observed differences to park management practices. Switching from intensively manicured green surfaces to non-manicured and benign neglect may favor richer microbiota, including those connected to human health.
Kokoelmat
- TUNICRIS-julkaisut [24199]
