Journal
SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 755, Issue -, Pages -Publisher
ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.142677
Keywords
Trophic relay; Mangrove; Carbon budget; Outwelling hypothesis; Mangrove litter; Carbon flux; Fish; Food webs
Categories
Funding
- Qatar National Research Foundation
- National Priorities Research Programme [NPRP 7 - 1302 - 1 - 242]
- Qatar National Library
- NERC [NE/J015644/1, NE/J015350/1] Funding Source: UKRI
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The study suggests that migratory fauna may contribute to carbon outwelling in mangroves, but quantifying this process remains challenging, with 40-50% of fixed carbon unaccounted for. In arid mangroves, migratory fauna consume a small portion of mangrove litter production, indicating a relatively weak contribution to carbon outwelling.
The outwelling paradigm argues that mangrove and saltmarsh wetlands export much excess production to downstream marine systems. However, outwelling is difficult to quantify and currently 40-50% of fixed carbon is unaccounted for. Some carbon is thought outwelled through mobile fauna, including fish, which visit and feed on mangrove produce during tidal inundation or early life stages before moving offshore, yet this pathway for carbon outwelling has never been quantified. We studied faunal carbon outwelling in three arid mangroves, where sharp isotopic gradients across the boundary between mangroves and down-stream systems permitted spatial differentiation of source of carbon in animal tissue. Stable isotope analysis (C, N, S) revealed 22-56% of the tissue of tidally migrating fauna was mangrove derived. Estimated consumption rates showed that 1.4% (38 kg C ha(-1) yr(-1)) of annual mangrove litter production was directly consumed by migratory fauna, with <1% potentially exported. We predict that the amount of faunally-outwelled carbon is likely to be highly correlated with biomass of migratory fauna. While this may vary globally, the measured migratory fauna biomass in these arid mangroves was within the range of observations for mangroves across diverse biogeographic ranges and environmental settings. Hence, this study provides a generalized prediction of the relatively weak contribution of faunal migration to carbon outwelling from mangroves and the current proposition, that the unaccounted-for 40-50% of mangrove C is exported as dissolved inorganic carbon, remains plausible. (C) 2020 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V.
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