Seagrass ecosystems as a globally significant carbon stock

被引:12
|
作者
James W. Fourqurean
Carlos M. Duarte
Hilary Kennedy
Núria Marbà
Marianne Holmer
Miguel Angel Mateo
Eugenia T. Apostolaki
Gary A. Kendrick
Dorte Krause-Jensen
Karen J. McGlathery
Oscar Serrano
机构
[1] Marine Science Program,Department of Biological Sciences and Southeast Environmental Research Center
[2] Florida International University,Department of Bioscience
[3] Department of Global Change Research. IMEDEA (CSIC-UIB) Institut Mediterrani d’Estudis Avançats,Department of Environmental Sciences
[4] The UWA Oceans Institute,undefined
[5] University of Western Australia,undefined
[6] School of Ocean Sciences,undefined
[7] College of Natural Sciences,undefined
[8] Bangor University,undefined
[9] Institute of Biology,undefined
[10] University of Southern Denmark,undefined
[11] Centre for Advanced Studies of Blanes,undefined
[12] (CEAB-CSIC),undefined
[13] Institute of Oceanography,undefined
[14] Hellenic Centre for Marine Research,undefined
[15] School of Plant Biology,undefined
[16] University of Western Australia,undefined
[17] Aarhus University,undefined
[18] University of Virginia,undefined
来源
Nature Geoscience | 2012年 / 5卷
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摘要
The protection of organic carbon stored in forests is considered as an important method for mitigating climate change. Like terrestrial ecosystems, coastal ecosystems store large amounts of carbon, and there are initiatives to protect these ‘blue carbon’ stores. Organic carbon stocks in tidal salt marshes and mangroves have been estimated, but uncertainties in the stores of seagrass meadows—some of the most productive ecosystems on Earth—hinder the application of marine carbon conservation schemes. Here, we compile published and unpublished measurements of the organic carbon content of living seagrass biomass and underlying soils in 946 distinct seagrass meadows across the globe. Using only data from sites for which full inventories exist, we estimate that, globally, seagrass ecosystems could store as much as 19.9 Pg organic carbon; according to a more conservative approach, in which we incorporate more data from surface soils and depth-dependent declines in soil carbon stocks, we estimate that the seagrass carbon pool lies between 4.2 and 8.4 Pg carbon. We estimate that present rates of seagrass loss could result in the release of up to 299 Tg carbon per year, assuming that all of the organic carbon in seagrass biomass and the top metre of soils is remineralized.
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页码:505 / 509
页数:4
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