4.8 Article

Climate-driven shifts in kelp forest composition reduce carbon sequestration potential

Journal

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
Volume 28, Issue 18, Pages 5514-5531

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.16299

Keywords

biogeography; carbon budget uncertainty; carbon flux; climate change; C; N; decay; degradation; ecophysiology; erosion; photophysiology

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Climate-driven changes in kelp forest composition in the temperate Northeast Atlantic may reduce the carbon sequestration potential of this ecosystem.
The potential contribution of kelp forests to blue carbon sinks is currently of great interest but interspecific variance has received no attention. In the temperate Northeast Atlantic, kelp forest composition is changing due to climate-driven poleward range shifts of cold temperate Laminaria digitata and Laminaria hyperborea and warm temperate Laminaria ochroleuca. To understand how this might affect the carbon sequestration potential (CSP) of this ecosystem, we quantified interspecific differences in carbon export and decomposition alongside changes in detrital photosynthesis and biochemistry. We found that while warm temperate kelp exports up to 71% more carbon per plant, it decomposes up to 155% faster than its boreal congeners. Elemental stoichiometry and polyphenolic content cannot fully explain faster carbon turnover, which may be attributable to contrasting tissue toughness or unknown biochemical and structural defenses. Faster decomposition causes the detrital photosynthetic apparatus of L. ochroleuca to be overwhelmed 20 days after export and lose integrity after 36 days, while detritus of cold temperate species maintains carbon assimilation. Depending on the photoenvironment, detrital photosynthesis could further exacerbate interspecific differences in decomposition via a potential positive feedback loop. Through compositional change such as the predicted prevalence of L. ochroleuca, ocean warming may therefore reduce the CSP of such temperate marine forests.

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