1. Carbon sequestration in aquatic ecosystems: Recent advances and challenges.
- Author
-
Santos, Isaac R., Hatje, Vanessa, Serrano, Oscar, Bastviken, David, and Krause‐Jensen, Dorte
- Subjects
CARBON sequestration ,ECOSYSTEMS ,MANGROVE forests ,CARBON cycle ,CLIMATE change mitigation - Abstract
Carbon sequestration can also occur as alkalinity, dissolved inorganic and organic carbon (DIC and DOC) as well as detritus export beyond the habitat where carbon is fixed. Aquatic carbon sequestration refers to the long-term (century-scale) storage of atmospheric carbon in sediments, biomass and/or water. GLO:4D9/02nov22:lno12268-fig-0001.jpg PHOTO (COLOR): 1 Blue carbon ecosystems (mangroves, saltmarshes, seagrass meadows, and kelp forests) are carbon sequestration hotspots. A faster turnover of contemporary autochthonous organic carbon ("fast carbon") than old allochthonous organic carbon ("slow carbon") revealed a decoupling between carbon burial and anthropogenic CO SB 2 sb emissions. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF