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Increasing carbon and nutrient burial rates in mangroves coincided with coastal aquaculture development and water eutrophication in NE Hainan, China
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Increasing carbon and nutrient burial rates in mangroves coincided with coastal aquaculture development and water eutrophication in NE Hainan, China

Zhongmao Jiang, Christian J Sanders, Kun Xin, Faming Wang, Nong Sheng and Yanmei Xiong
Marine pollution bulletin, Vol.199, 115934
02/2024
PMID: 38118399

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UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

This output has contributed to the advancement of the following goals:

#13 Climate Action
#14 Life Below Water

Source: InCites

Abstract

Blue carbon Coastal wetland Carbon accumulation rate Geomorphologic setting Sediment accretion rate
Mangroves sequester and store large area-specific quantities of blue carbon (C) and essential nutrients such as nitrogen (N) and phosphorous (P). Quantifying C and nutrient burial rates in mangroves across a centennial time span and relating these rates to mangrove habitat is fundamental for elucidating the role of mangroves in carbon and nutrient budgets and their responses to environmental changes. However, relevant data are very limited in China. In this study, we used the radionuclides (210Pb and 137Cs) to determine chronologies and C, N and P burial rates in two mangrove forests located at different geomorphologic settings in NE Hainan Island, China. We found that the temporal patterns of C, N and P burial rates since 1900 fitted a quadratic function with a notable increase after 1960s in both mangroves, which coincided with the rapid development of coastal aquaculture since 1960s in NE Hainan and the subsequent coastal water eutrophication in this area. Sediment accretion rate (SAR) and mass accumulation rate (MAR) stayed relatively steady in the open-coastal mangroves, while they increased exponentially in the estuarine mangroves since 1900. The estuarine mangroves had significantly higher SAR and C, N and P burial rates than the open-coastal mangroves. C, N and P burial rates averaged at 141.52 g m−2 a−1, 6.27 g m−2 a−1 and 1.14 g m−2 a−1, respectively in the estuarine core, and these rates averaged at 61.71 g m−2 a−1, 3.71 g m−2 a−1 and 0.43 g m−2 a−1, respectively in the open-coastal core. The results suggest that estuarine mangroves may be more capable of surviving accelerating sea level rise under climate change and play a greater role in C accumulation and nutrient filtering under anthropogenic nutrient enrichment than marine-dominated mangroves. Blue C burial may be enhanced by coastal water eutrophication, but such a relationship needs to be tested in further studies.

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