4.7 Article

Expanding Greenland seagrass meadows contribute new sediment carbon sinks

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 8, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-32249-w

Keywords

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Funding

  1. EU FP7 (project Opera's) [308393]
  2. King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST)
  3. COCOA project under the BONUS program - EU 7th framework program
  4. Danish Research Council
  5. Generalitat de Catalunya [2017 SGR-1588]
  6. ICTA 'Unit of Excellence' (MinECo) [MDM2015-0552]
  7. NOVAGRASS project - Danish Council for Strategic Research [0603-00003DSF]

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The loss of natural carbon sinks, such as seagrass meadows, contributes to gren house gas emissions and, thus, global warming. Whereas seagrass meadows are declining in temperate and tropical regions, they are expected to expand into the Arctic with future warming. Using paleoreconstruction of carbon burial and sources of organic carbon to shallow coastal sediments of three Greenland seagrass (Zostera marina) meadows of contrasting density and age, we test the hypothesis that Arctic seagrass meadows are expanding along with the associated sediment carbon sinks. We show that sediments accreted before 1900 were highly C-13 depleted, indicative of low inputs of seagrass carbon, whereas from 1940's to present carbon burial rates increased greatly and sediment carbon stocks were largely enriched with seagrass material. Currently, the increase of seagrass carbon inputs to sediments of lush and dense meadows (Kapisillit and Ameralik) was 2.6 fold larger than that of sparse meadows with low biomass (Kobbefjord). Our results demonstrate an increasing important role of Arctic seagrass meadows in supporting sediment carbon sinks, likely to be enhanced with future Arctic warming.

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