A marine heatwave drives massive losses from the world's largest seagrass carbon stocks
Arias-Ortiz, A.; Serrano, O.; Masque, P.; Lavery, P. S.; Mueller, U.; Kendrick, G. A.; Rozaimi, M.; Esteban, A.; Fourqurean, J. W.; Marba, N.; Mateo, M. A.; Murray, K.; Rule, M. J.; Duarte, C. M.
NATURE CLIMATE CHANGE
2018
VL / 8 - BP / 338 - EP / +
abstract
Seagrass ecosystems contain globally significant organic carbon (C) stocks. However, climate change and increasing frequency of extreme events threaten their preservation. Shark Bay, Western Australia, has the largest C stock reported for a seagrass ecosystem, containing up to 1.3% of the total C stored within the top metre of seagrass sediments worldwide. On the basis of field studies and satellite imagery, we estimate that 36% of Shark Bay's seagrass meadows were damaged following a marine heatwave in 2010/2011. Assuming that 10 to 50% of the seagrass sediment C stock was exposed to oxic conditions after disturbance, between 2 and 9 Tg CO2 could have been released to the atmosphere during the following three years, increasing emissions from land-use change in Australia by 4-21% per annum. With heatwaves predicted to increase with further climate warming, conservation of seagrass ecosystems is essential to avoid adverse feedbacks on the climate system.
-
288 InfluRatio
AccesS level
Green published, Green submitted
MENTIONS DATA
Geosciences
-
2 Twitter
-
25 Wikipedia
-
3 News
-
101 Policy
Environment/Ecology
-
2 Twitter
-
25 Wikipedia
-
3 News
-
101 Policy
Among papers in Geosciences
Among papers in Environment/Ecology
Más información
Influscience
Rankings
- BETA VERSION