Identifying and protecting macroalgae detritus sinks toward climate change mitigation

Autor: Ana M. Queirós, Karen Tait, James R. Clark, Michael Bedington, Christine Pascoe, Ricardo Torres, Paul J. Somerfield, Dan A. Smale
Rok vydání: 2022
Předmět:
Zdroj: Ecological applications : a publication of the Ecological Society of America.
ISSN: 1051-0761
Popis: Harnessing natural solutions to mitigate climate change requires an understanding of carbon fixation, flux and sequestration across ocean habitats. Recent studies suggest that exported seaweed particulate organic carbon is stored within soft sediment systems. However, very little is known about how seaweed detritus disperses from coastlines, or where it may enter seabed carbon stores, where it could become the target of conservation efforts. Here, focusing on regionally dominant seaweed species, we surveyed environmental DNA (eDNA) of natural coastal sediments, and studied their connectivity to seaweed habitats using a particle tracking model parameterized to reproduce seaweed detritus dispersal behavior based on laboratory observation of seaweed fragment degradation and sinking. Experiments showed seaweed detritus density changing over time, differently across species. This, in turn, modified distances travelled by released fragments until they reached the seabed for the first time, during model simulations. Dispersal pathways connected detritus from the shore to the open ocean but, importantly, also to coastal sediments, and this was reflected by field eDNA evidence. Dispersion pathways were also affected by hydrodynamic conditions, varying in space and time. Both the properties and timing of released detritus, individual to each macroalgal population, and short-term near-seabed and medium-term water-column transport pathways, are thus seemingly important in determining the connectivity between seaweed habitats and potential sedimentary sinks. Studies such as this one, supported by further field verification of sedimentary carbon sequestration rates and source partitioning, are still needed to help quantify the role of seaweed in the ocean carbon cycle. Such studies will provide vital evidence to inform on the potential need to develop blue carbon conservation mechanisms, beyond wetlands. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
Databáze: OpenAIRE