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Can we manage coastal ecosystems to sequester more blue carbon?
Authors
TB Atwood
RM Connolly
+8 more
JJ Kelleway
PI Macreadie
DA Nielsen
K Petrou
PJ Ralph
JR Seymour
ACG Thomson
SM Trevathan-Tackett
Publication date
1 January 2017
Publisher
'Wiley'
Doi
Cite
Abstract
© The Ecological Society of America To promote the sequestration of blue carbon, resource managers rely on best-management practices that have historically included protecting and restoring vegetated coastal habitats (seagrasses, tidal marshes, and mangroves), but are now beginning to incorporate catchment-level approaches. Drawing upon knowledge from a broad range of environmental variables that influence blue carbon sequestration, including warming, carbon dioxide levels, water depth, nutrients, runoff, bioturbation, physical disturbances, and tidal exchange, we discuss three potential management strategies that hold promise for optimizing coastal blue carbon sequestration: (1) reducing anthropogenic nutrient inputs, (2) reinstating top-down control of bioturbator populations, and (3) restoring hydrology. By means of case studies, we explore how these three strategies can minimize blue carbon losses and maximize gains. A key research priority is to more accurately quantify the impacts of these strategies on atmospheric greenhouse-gas emissions in different settings at landscape scales
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OPUS - University of Technology Sydney
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Crossref
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info:doi/10.1002%2Ffee.1484
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Griffith Research Online
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