Deakin University
Browse
macreadie-geochemicalanalyses-20.pdf (2.35 MB)

Geochemical analyses reveal the importance of environmental history for blue carbon sequestration

Download (2.35 MB)
journal contribution
posted on 2017-07-01, 00:00 authored by J J Kelleway, N Saintilan, Peter MacreadiePeter Macreadie, J A Baldock, H Heijnis, A Zawadzki, P Gadd, G Jacobsen, P J Ralph
American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved. Coastal habitats including saltmarshes and mangrove forests can accumulate and store significant blue carbon stocks, which may persist for millennia. Despite this implied stability, the distribution and structure of intertidal-supratidal wetlands are known to respond to changes imposed by geomorphic evolution, climatic, sea level, and anthropogenic influences. In this study, we reconstruct environmental histories and biogeochemical conditions in four wetlands of similar contemporary vegetation in SE Australia. The objective is to assess the importance of historic factors to contemporary organic carbon (C) stocks and accumulation rates. Results from the four cores—two collected from marine-influenced saltmarshes (Wapengo marine site (WAP-M) and Port Stephens marine site (POR-M)) and two from fluvial influenced saltmarshes (Wapengo fluvial site (WAP-F) and Port Stephens fluvial site (POR-F))—highlight different environmental histories and preservation conditions. High C stocks are associated with the presence of a mangrove phase below the contemporary saltmarsh sediments in the POR-M and POR-F cores. 13 C nuclear magnetic resonance analyses show this historic mangrove root C to be remarkably stable in its molecular composition despite its age, consistent with its position in deep sediments. WAP-M and WAP-F cores did not contain mangrove root C; however, significant preservation of char C (up to 46% of C in some depths) in WAP-F reveals the importance of historic catchment processes to this site. Together, these results highlight the importance of integrating historic ecosystem and catchment factors into attempts to upscale C accounting to broader spatial scales.

History

Journal

Journal of geophysical research: biogeosciences

Volume

122

Issue

7

Pagination

1789 - 1805

Publisher

Wiley

Location

Chichester, Eng.

ISSN

2169-8953

eISSN

2169-8961

Language

eng

Publication classification

C Journal article; C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2017, American Geophysical Union