Sediment carbon storage in subtidal beds of the invasive seagrass Halophila stipulacea along an extreme water depth gradient, St. Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands
Kelsey M. Vaughn , Allie Durdall , Demian A. Willette , Marilyn Brandt , Sophia Costa , Kristin Wilson Grimes
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Blue carbon ecosystems such as mangroves, salt marshes, and seagrass beds are found globally and are fundamental to fisheries production, storm surge protection, and carbon sequestration. The contribution of seagrass ecosystems to global carbon stocks is still not well understood, including in the United States Virgin Islands (USVI). No study has been published to-date assessing the sediment carbon density (SCD) in seagrass beds in the USVI. This study focused on the carbon storage ability of the invasive species, Halophila stipulacea, which is compact in size compared to common native seagrasses and has spread rapidly to become a dominant seagrass in the USVI. This species forms dense mats across a wide depth range (<1 m to 50 m) typically uninhabitable to its native counterparts (Syringodium filiforme and Thalassia testudinum). Several biotic and abiotic factors influence the carbon storage ability of seagrass, yet little is known about carbon storage sequestration along a depth gradient for H. stipulacea. This study provides the first assessment of the biological characteristics (shoot density, leaf area, leaf height, and percent cover) and carbon storage ability of H. stipulacea across a depth gradient (shallow: 5–10 m; medium: 15–20 m; deep: 25–30 m) at two sites in St. Thomas, USVI. Mean sediment carbon density (SCD) values per core reported for H. stipulacea in this study ranged from 3.88 to 15.67mgC/cm3; these were comparable to regional and global seagrass studies. Biological characteristics were not an accurate predictor of SCD. A significant interaction between water depth and site was found to affect mean SCD of H. stipulacea beds. It is likely that site-specific factors most likely account for variations seen within the data. Although carbon values in this study compared to values reported in the literature, other factors such as land use, proximity to carbon sources, sediment microbial community, and water current patterns may be driving SCD values. These findings highlight the need for site and species-specific carbon storage assessments on local to regional scales to accurately estimate current and forecasted blue carbon stocks.
期刊介绍:
Aquatic Botany offers a platform for papers relevant to a broad international readership on fundamental and applied aspects of marine and freshwater macroscopic plants in a context of ecology or environmental biology. This includes molecular, biochemical and physiological aspects of macroscopic aquatic plants as well as the classification, structure, function, dynamics and ecological interactions in plant-dominated aquatic communities and ecosystems. It is an outlet for papers dealing with research on the consequences of disturbance and stressors (e.g. environmental fluctuations and climate change, pollution, grazing and pathogens), use and management of aquatic plants (plant production and decomposition, commercial harvest, plant control) and the conservation of aquatic plant communities (breeding, transplantation and restoration). Specialized publications on certain rare taxa or papers on aquatic macroscopic plants from under-represented regions in the world can also find their place, subject to editor evaluation. Studies on fungi or microalgae will remain outside the scope of Aquatic Botany.