TY - JOUR
T1 - Carbon storage in coastal wetlands is related to elevation and how it changes over time
AU - Owers, Christopher J.
AU - Woodroffe, Colin D.
AU - Mazumder, Debashish
AU - Rogers, Kerrylee
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors greatly appreciate the many fieldwork assistants that helped ensure high quality data collection; Daniel Owers, Steve Brooks, Kirti Lal, Brent Peterson, Neil Saintilan, Tsun-You Pan, Kate Owers, Daniela Mueller, Catherine Bowie, Laura Mogensen and Junjie Deng. Laboratory assistance was provided by John Morrison and José Abrantes (UOW), and carbon isotope analysis performed by ANSTO and University of California (Davis) Stable Isotope Facility. NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service and NSW Department of Primary Industries (Fisheries) supported access to field sites. Fieldwork was conducted in accordance with the Office of Environment and Heritage scientific license SL101523 and SL101724 . Aerial imagery was provided by Land and Property Information, NSW. This research has been conducted with the support of the University of Wollongong Global Challenges Program, the Australian Government Research Training Program Scholarship award to CJO, and Australian Research Council Future Fellowship awarded to KR (FT130100532).
Funding Information:
Kerrylee Rogers reports financial support was provided by Australian Research Council.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022
PY - 2022/4/5
Y1 - 2022/4/5
N2 - National and global scale initiatives to reduce loss and promote restoration of coastal ecosystems have leveraged the capacity of mangrove and saltmarsh to contribute to climate change mitigation through carbon sequestration. The success of these programs is predicated on reliable estimates of carbon storage and how this changes over time. Efforts to describe spatial variation in below-ground carbon storage have largely focussed on surface sediments, with few studies able to characterise carbon at greater soil depths. This study demonstrates that landscape position occupied by wetland vegetation influences both carbon storage and sources, and that understanding evolutionary infill of estuaries is crucial for characterising spatial variation in carbon storage. We focussed on coastal wetlands in southeast Australia where sea level has a long history of relative stability over the past few millennia. Under these conditions, we show that carbon storage varies across three depth zones in substrate: the active root zone (associated with distribution of contemporary vegetation), inactive root zone (associated with past environmental conditions) and subtidal zone (beyond the contemporary intertidal zone). This conceptual approach relates spatial variation in carbon storage to key processes influencing carbon addition and decomposition, and can be applied elsewhere depending on the sea-level history at the specific site. We demonstrate that models that define carbon storage in the context of variation in landscape position of vegetation in the tidal frame provide improved confidence required for blue carbon assessments.
AB - National and global scale initiatives to reduce loss and promote restoration of coastal ecosystems have leveraged the capacity of mangrove and saltmarsh to contribute to climate change mitigation through carbon sequestration. The success of these programs is predicated on reliable estimates of carbon storage and how this changes over time. Efforts to describe spatial variation in below-ground carbon storage have largely focussed on surface sediments, with few studies able to characterise carbon at greater soil depths. This study demonstrates that landscape position occupied by wetland vegetation influences both carbon storage and sources, and that understanding evolutionary infill of estuaries is crucial for characterising spatial variation in carbon storage. We focussed on coastal wetlands in southeast Australia where sea level has a long history of relative stability over the past few millennia. Under these conditions, we show that carbon storage varies across three depth zones in substrate: the active root zone (associated with distribution of contemporary vegetation), inactive root zone (associated with past environmental conditions) and subtidal zone (beyond the contemporary intertidal zone). This conceptual approach relates spatial variation in carbon storage to key processes influencing carbon addition and decomposition, and can be applied elsewhere depending on the sea-level history at the specific site. We demonstrate that models that define carbon storage in the context of variation in landscape position of vegetation in the tidal frame provide improved confidence required for blue carbon assessments.
KW - Carbon storage
KW - Elevation
KW - Mangrove
KW - Saltmarsh
KW - Stable carbon isotopes
KW - Vegetation structure
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85124272409&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.ecss.2022.107775
DO - 10.1016/j.ecss.2022.107775
M3 - Article
SN - 0272-7714
VL - 267
JO - Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
JF - Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science
M1 - 107775
ER -