“…Soil P forms generally exhibit evident variations owing to the differences and changes in pedogenic environments of wetlands, such as parent material, hydrothermal, and vegetation conditions (Cheesman et al, 2010, 2012; Cui, Ou, Wang, Wu, Yan, Han, & Li, 2019; Negassa et al, 2020; Qu et al, 2021). Presently, more than half of wetlands worldwide have degraded due to climate change, rodent harm, and anthropogenic disturbances, such as drainage, overgrazing, and aquaculture (Nguyen et al, 2016; Ren et al, 2019; Zuquette et al, 2020), which have completely altered the conditions of hydrology, salinity, vegetation, and soil characteristics in wetland ecosystems (Cheng et al, 2020; Li et al, 2022; Zeng et al, 2021; Zhao, Bai, et al, 2017). Therefore, these changes have further affected soil P accumulation and its forms via P transformation, such as sorption/desorption, precipitation/dissolution, immobilization/mineralization, and weathering processes (Augusto et al, 2017; Barrow, 2015; Khosa et al, 2021; Qu et al, 2021; Smith et al, 2021).…”