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Blue carbon gains from glacial retreat along Antarctic fjords: What should we expect?

Rising atmospheric CO(2) is intensifying climate change but it is also driving global and particularly polar greening. However, most blue carbon sinks (that held by marine organisms) are shrinking, which is important as these are hotspots of genuine carbon sequestration. Polar blue carbon increases...

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Autores principales: Barnes, David K. A., Sands, Chester J., Cook, Alison, Howard, Floyd, Roman Gonzalez, Alejandro, Muñoz–Ramirez, Carlos, Retallick, Kate, Scourse, James, Van Landeghem, Katrien, Zwerschke, Nadescha
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7216916/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32108972
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/gcb.15055
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author Barnes, David K. A.
Sands, Chester J.
Cook, Alison
Howard, Floyd
Roman Gonzalez, Alejandro
Muñoz–Ramirez, Carlos
Retallick, Kate
Scourse, James
Van Landeghem, Katrien
Zwerschke, Nadescha
author_facet Barnes, David K. A.
Sands, Chester J.
Cook, Alison
Howard, Floyd
Roman Gonzalez, Alejandro
Muñoz–Ramirez, Carlos
Retallick, Kate
Scourse, James
Van Landeghem, Katrien
Zwerschke, Nadescha
author_sort Barnes, David K. A.
collection PubMed
description Rising atmospheric CO(2) is intensifying climate change but it is also driving global and particularly polar greening. However, most blue carbon sinks (that held by marine organisms) are shrinking, which is important as these are hotspots of genuine carbon sequestration. Polar blue carbon increases with losses of marine ice over high latitude continental shelf areas. Marine ice (sea ice, ice shelf and glacier retreat) losses generate a valuable negative feedback on climate change. Blue carbon change with sea ice and ice shelf losses has been estimated, but not how blue carbon responds to glacier retreat along fjords. We derive a testable estimate of glacier retreat driven blue carbon gains by investigating three fjords in the West Antarctic Peninsula (WAP). We started by multiplying ~40 year mean glacier retreat rates by the number of retreating WAP fjords and their time of exposure. We multiplied this area by regional zoobenthic carbon means from existing datasets to suggest that WAP fjords generate 3,130 tonnes of new zoobenthic carbon per year (t zC/year) and sequester >780 t zC/year. We tested this by capture and analysis of 204 high resolution seabed images along emerging WAP fjords. Biota within these images were identified to density per 13 functional groups. Mean stored carbon per individual was assigned from literature values to give a stored zoobenthic Carbon per area, which was multiplied up by area of fjord exposed over time, which increased the estimate to 4,536 t zC/year. The purpose of this study was to establish a testable estimate of blue carbon change caused by glacier retreat along Antarctic fjords and thus to establish its relative importance compared to polar and other carbon sinks.
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spelling pubmed-72169162020-05-13 Blue carbon gains from glacial retreat along Antarctic fjords: What should we expect? Barnes, David K. A. Sands, Chester J. Cook, Alison Howard, Floyd Roman Gonzalez, Alejandro Muñoz–Ramirez, Carlos Retallick, Kate Scourse, James Van Landeghem, Katrien Zwerschke, Nadescha Glob Chang Biol Opinion Rising atmospheric CO(2) is intensifying climate change but it is also driving global and particularly polar greening. However, most blue carbon sinks (that held by marine organisms) are shrinking, which is important as these are hotspots of genuine carbon sequestration. Polar blue carbon increases with losses of marine ice over high latitude continental shelf areas. Marine ice (sea ice, ice shelf and glacier retreat) losses generate a valuable negative feedback on climate change. Blue carbon change with sea ice and ice shelf losses has been estimated, but not how blue carbon responds to glacier retreat along fjords. We derive a testable estimate of glacier retreat driven blue carbon gains by investigating three fjords in the West Antarctic Peninsula (WAP). We started by multiplying ~40 year mean glacier retreat rates by the number of retreating WAP fjords and their time of exposure. We multiplied this area by regional zoobenthic carbon means from existing datasets to suggest that WAP fjords generate 3,130 tonnes of new zoobenthic carbon per year (t zC/year) and sequester >780 t zC/year. We tested this by capture and analysis of 204 high resolution seabed images along emerging WAP fjords. Biota within these images were identified to density per 13 functional groups. Mean stored carbon per individual was assigned from literature values to give a stored zoobenthic Carbon per area, which was multiplied up by area of fjord exposed over time, which increased the estimate to 4,536 t zC/year. The purpose of this study was to establish a testable estimate of blue carbon change caused by glacier retreat along Antarctic fjords and thus to establish its relative importance compared to polar and other carbon sinks. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2020-03-23 2020-05 /pmc/articles/PMC7216916/ /pubmed/32108972 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/gcb.15055 Text en © 2020 The Authors. Global Change Biology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Opinion
Barnes, David K. A.
Sands, Chester J.
Cook, Alison
Howard, Floyd
Roman Gonzalez, Alejandro
Muñoz–Ramirez, Carlos
Retallick, Kate
Scourse, James
Van Landeghem, Katrien
Zwerschke, Nadescha
Blue carbon gains from glacial retreat along Antarctic fjords: What should we expect?
title Blue carbon gains from glacial retreat along Antarctic fjords: What should we expect?
title_full Blue carbon gains from glacial retreat along Antarctic fjords: What should we expect?
title_fullStr Blue carbon gains from glacial retreat along Antarctic fjords: What should we expect?
title_full_unstemmed Blue carbon gains from glacial retreat along Antarctic fjords: What should we expect?
title_short Blue carbon gains from glacial retreat along Antarctic fjords: What should we expect?
title_sort blue carbon gains from glacial retreat along antarctic fjords: what should we expect?
topic Opinion
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7216916/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32108972
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/gcb.15055
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