bioRxiv preprint

Recreational climbing alters cliff soil chemistry and plant-associated fungal communities

Cliffs are environmentally extreme yet biodiversity-rich ecosystems that harbour specialist plants, many endemic and threatened. Plant persistence in these nutrient-poor substrates may depend on tightly linked soil- and root-associated microbial communities, which remain poorly understood. These interactions may become increasingly important with the global expansion of recreational climbing. While physical climbing impacts on vegetation are documented, potential chemical effects, from the use of climbing chalk (magnesium carbonate), on soil properties and plant-associated microbiota remain unknown. We sampled soils and roots beneath cliff-specialist and generalist plants, and unvegetated so

ecology