Periodic Reporting for period 1 - SCaLED (Seagrass Carbon cycling and Local Environmental Drivers)
Periodo di rendicontazione: 2023-03-01 al 2025-02-28
Up to now, research has focussed on assessing the total organic carbon stocks within seagrass meadows and their associated sediments. Stock-type measurements, however, vary from site to site depending on local factors of water motion and organic carbon supply. To be able to reliably assess the carbon sequestration capacity of an ecosystem and gain the power to promote further carbon sequestration, there is a need to understand the processes governing organic carbon capture and burial in marine sediments. Combining expertise from biogeochemists and ecologists the SCaLED project’s overall objective was to quantify organic carbon transformation within the coastal zone under varying environmental factors. This involved measuring the productivity of the seagrasses and the rates of CO2 incorporation into their biomass across the temperate seasons, folllowed by quantifying the degradation processes of the organic carbon as it moves through the coastal zone and gets buried within the seafloor sediments. With these measurements, we aimed to provide the necessary data to highlight the overall impact that seagrass meadows have on the coastal carbon cycle and to detail the conditions required to promote carbon sequestration within the coastal zone. Furthermore, this data will be utilised by ocean modellers to examine varying scenarios of global change and its impact on the marine carbon cycle.
During a disturbance event, such as a storm or through the removal of seagrasses, the sediment within a seagrass meadow gets resuspended in the water column. This resuspension exposes the buried organic carbon to oxic conditions which cause it to be degraded at 3-5 times the rate than when it remains undisturbed in the sediment. Like the degradation rates within the sediment, the rate of this degradation during resuspension is highly dependent upon the season and sea temperature. Disturbance events that cause sediments in the coastal zone to be resuspended in summer and autumn result in more organic carbon degradation to CO2 than disturbance events in winter and spring. However, very little organic carbon actually gets sequestered at anthropogenically relevant time-scales (1000’s years), and sediment disturbance events often only quicken the natural degradation of the organic carbon stored within coastal sediments.
The SCaLED project highlights the dynamic nature of carbon sequestration in the coastal zone. Studies that account for natural degradation proccesses in other coastal systems are required to improve our understanding of the coastal carbon cycle and to identify important habitats contributing to long-term carbon sequestration. Data that considers the degradation processes of organic carbon as it moves through coastal habitats is crucial for quantifying the marine carbon cycle and fully understanding the extent of human activities in the coastal zone.