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Health & Science4h 17m ago
A new study published in Biochar suggests that the success of common soil restoration practices may depend strongly on the balance between fungi and bacteria already living in the soil.
Beijing, China
Who
Dr. Qun Gao, Dr. Ling Han
What
A new study published in Biochar suggests that the success of common soil restoration practices may depend strongly on the balance between fungi and bacteria already living in the soil.
When
Thu, 11 Jun 2026 21:30:00 GMT · 4h 17m ago
Where
Beijing, China ·
Why
Researchers conducted a field experiment across three representative urban greenspaces in Beijing, China.
The Frontline Impact
How this affects you
This study challenges assumptions about soil restoration, showing that nutrient-poor urban soils offer the greatest opportunity for carbon gains when fungi are supported, which can help cities worldwide with climate-friendly management.
Story chain
5 events in this thread- Currently Reading4h 17m agoA new study published in Biochar suggests that the success of common soil restoration practices may depend strongly on the balance between fungi and bacteria already living in the soil.
- Health & Science4h 17m agoA new study published in Biochar suggests that the success of common soil restoration practices may depend strongly on the balance between fungi and bacteria already living in the soil.Open article
- Health & Science4h 17m agoA new study found that fungi enhance carbon accrual when biochar and compost are added to nutrient-deficient urban soils.Open article
- Health & Science4h 17m agoA new study published in Biochar suggests that the success of common soil restoration practices may depend strongly on the balance between fungi and bacteria already living in the soil.Open article
- Health & Science4h 17m agoA new study published in Biochar suggests that the success of common soil restoration practices may depend strongly on the balance between fungi and bacteria already living in the soil.Open article
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