Blue carbon additionality: New insights from the radiocarbon content of saltmarsh soils and their respired CO2

Author:

Houston Alex1ORCID,Garnett Mark H2ORCID,Austin William E. N.13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Geography and Sustainable Development University of St Andrews St Andrews UK

2. National Environmental Isotope Facility, Scottish Universities Environmental Research Centre East Kilbride UK

3. Scottish Association for Marine Science Dunstaffnage United Kingdom

Abstract

AbstractInternational policy frameworks recognize the net drawdown and storage of atmospheric greenhouse gases through management interventions on blue carbon ecosystems (saltmarshes, mangroves, seagrasses) as potential emissions offset strategies. However, key questions remain around the “additionality” of the carbon sequestered by these ecosystems, and whether some fraction of the organic carbon (OC) that does not derive from in situ production (allochthonous) should be included in carbon budgets. This study compares the radiocarbon (14C) contents of saltmarsh soils and CO2 evolved from aerobic laboratory incubations to show that young OC is preferentially respired over aged OC, and that the latter is also vulnerable to remineralization under oxic conditions. This highlights that management interventions which reduce the exposure of saltmarsh soils to oxic conditions support the inclusion of some portion of allochthonous OC in carbon budgets. Elevated temperature incubations provide preliminary evidence that the predominant source of respired OC will not change under predicted future warmer conditions. Saltmarsh typology also influences the 14C content of both the bulk soil and respired CO2, highlighting the importance of site selection for optimized blue carbon additionality.

Funder

Natural Environment Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

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