Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

Fungal and bacterial community composition and assemblage in managed and unmanaged urban landscapes in Wisconsin

Fernanda Proaño-Cuenca, Michael Millican, Emma Buczkowski, Ming‐Yi Chou, Paul Koch

The Science of The Total Environment · 2025

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Summary

Microbial communities play crucial roles in ecosystem functioning, yet their diversity and assembly in urban turfgrass systems remain underexplored. In 2017, microbial communities within 48 samples from managed turfgrass (home lawns, golf course fairways, and putting greens) and an unmanaged grass mixture in Madison, WI, USA were analyzed across leaf, thatch, rhizoplane, and rhizosphere habitats Intensive management, particularly in nitrogen-rich, sand-based putting greens, reduced fungal richness and diversity, whereas bacterial diversity patterns varied. Beta diversity analyses revealed distinct clustering: fungal communities differed most in unmanaged systems, while bacterial communities clustered within managed systems. Functional profiling demonstrated that bacterial communities maint

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.1016/j.scitotenv.2025.178873
Catalogue ID
SNmok1w34a-5zm3kx
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