4.7 Article

Modeling net ecosystem carbon balance and loss in coastal wetlands exposed to sea-level rise and saltwater intrusion

期刊

ECOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS
卷 32, 期 8, 页码 -

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/eap.2702

关键词

elevation change; net ecosystem C balance; peat collapse; saltwater intrusion; sea-level rise; wetland vulnerability

资金

  1. Florida Sea Grant, University of Florida [R/C-S-86]
  2. National Science Foundation [DBL-1237517]
  3. Florida International University
  4. Everglades Foundation
  5. South Florida Water Management District
  6. Everglades National Park

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Coastal wetlands are important carbon stores, but factors such as sea-level rise, saltwater intrusion, and modified freshwater discharge can lead to their collapse. This study developed a mechanistic peat elevation model based on experiments in Florida Coastal Everglades and simulated the impact of elevated salinity on carbon balance and peat elevation. The results showed that saltwater intrusion, inundation, and dry-down have significant impacts on the wetlands, providing management targets for restoration efforts.
Coastal wetlands are globally important stores of carbon (C). However, accelerated sea-level rise (SLR), increased saltwater intrusion, and modified freshwater discharge can contribute to the collapse of peat marshes, converting coastal peatlands into open water. Applying results from multiple experiments from sawgrass (Cladium jamaicense)-dominated freshwater and brackish water marshes in the Florida Coastal Everglades, we developed a system-level mechanistic peat elevation model (EvPEM). We applied the model to simulate net ecosystem C balance (NECB) and peat elevation in response to elevated salinity under inundation and drought exposure. Using a mass C balance approach, we estimated net gain in C and corresponding export of aquatic fluxes (F AQ ) in the fresh- water marsh under ambient conditions (NECB = 1119 +/- 229 gC m(-2) year(-1); F-AQ = 317 +/- 186 gC m(-2) year(-1)). In contrast, the brackish water marsh exhibited substantial peat loss and aquatic C export with ambient (NECB = -366 +/- 15 gC m(-2) year(-1); F-AQ = 311 +/- 30 gC m(-2) year(-1)) and elevated salinity (NECB = -594 +/- 94 gC m(-2) year(-1): F-AQ = 729 +/- 142 gC m(-2) year(-1)) under extended exposed conditions. Further, mass balance suggests a considerable decline in soil C and corresponding elevation loss with elevated salinity and seasonal dry-down. Applying EvPEM, we developed critical marsh net primary productivity (NPP) thresholds as a function of salinity to simulate accumulating, steady-state, and collapsing peat elevations. The optimization showed that similar to 150-1070gC m(-2) year(-1) NPP could support a stable peat elevation (elevation change approximate to SLR), with the corresponding salinity ranging from 1 to 20 ppt under increasing inundation levels. The C budgeting and modeling illustrate the impacts of saltwater intrusion, inundation, and seasonal dry-down and reduce uncertainties in understanding the fate of coastal peat wetlands with SLR and freshwater restoration. The modeling results provide management targets for hydrologic restoration based on the ecological conditions needed to reduce the vulnerability of the Everglades' peat marshes to collapse. The approach can be extended to other coastal peatlands to quantify C loss and improve understanding of the influence of the biological controls on wetland C storage changes for coastal management.

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