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A global assessment of mangrove soil organic carbon sources and implications for blue carbon credit

Environmental Studies and Forestry

A global assessment of mangrove soil organic carbon sources and implications for blue carbon credit

J. Zhang, S. Gan, et al.

Mangroves lock away both local and transported organic carbon, but how much comes from each source? This global stable-isotope study shows mangrove-derived autochthonous OC dominates top-meter soils (49% in estuarine and 62% in marine systems), while terrestrial inputs raise estuarine SOC and marine mangroves store 67% of global mangrove SOC. Research conducted by Authors present in <Authors> tag.

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Abstract
Mangroves can retain both autochthonous and allochthonous marine and/or terrestrial organic carbon (OC) in sediments. Accurate quantification of these OC sources is essential for the proper allocation of blue C credits. Here, we conduct a global-scale analysis of sediments autochthonous and allochthonous OC contributions in estuarine and marine mangroves using stable isotopes. Globally, mangrove-derived autochthonous OC was the main contributor to estuarine and marine mangrove top-meter soil organic carbon (SOC) (49% and 62%, respectively). Less marine allochthonous OC (21%) was deposited than terrestrial allochthonous OC (30%) in estuarine mangrove sediments. Estuarine mangroves accumulated more SOC in sediments than marine mangroves (282 ± 8.1 Mg C ha⁻¹ and 250 ± 5.0 Mg C ha⁻¹, respectively), primarily due to the additional terrestrial OC inputs. Globally, marine mangroves held 67% of the total mangrove SOC, reaching 3025 ± 345 Tg C, while 1502 ± 154 Tg C was stored in estuarine mangrove sediments. The findings emphasize the substantial influence of coastal environmental settings on OC contributions, underlining the necessity of accurate OC source quantification for the effective allocation of blue carbon credits.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Oct 18, 2024
Authors
Jingfan Zhang, Shuchai Gan, Pingjian Yang, Jinge Zhou, Xingyun Huang, Han Chen, Hua He, Neil Saintilan, Christian J. Sanders, Faming Wang
Tags
mangroves
autochthonous organic carbon
allochthonous organic carbon
stable isotopes
soil organic carbon (SOC)
blue carbon credits
estuarine vs marine mangroves
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