As one of the major blue carbon ecosystems, mangroves provide critical ecosystem services in mitigating global climate change. However, the future complex and variable climate conditions may lead to the uncertainty in trajectories of blue carbon capacity. Elevated atmospheric CO 2 concentrations ( e CO 2 ) is projected to become a prominent driver to mangrove blue carbon in the future.
A group of scientists working on blue carbon reviewed studies on “changes in mangrove blue carbon under elevated atmospheric CO 2 ” to identify the pathways for how e CO 2 might influence mangrove ecosystem carbon cycling. The research is published as a review article in Ecosystem health and sustainability , a Science Partner Journal.
This review highlights that mangrove has a negative feedback to climate change existed whereby e CO 2 added to mangrove’s ability to sequester additional carbon, which in turn reduces the rate by which CO 2 builds. Furthermore, e CO 2 affects warming and sea-level rise through alternate pathways, which might co-influences the mangrove response in both antagonistic and synergistic ways.
The scientists suggest to establish more experiments to understand the influence of e CO 2 on biological processes that might lead to greenhouse gas emissions, and invest in mesocosm-scale simulation experiments that could provide datasets for prediction in future scenarios. Given the complexity of the interactions of biological and environmental factors with e CO 2 , long-term field observations and in situ simulation experiments can help to better understand the mechanisms for proper model initialization to predict future changes in mangrove carbon sequestration.
Ecosystem Health and Sustainability
Systematic review
Lab-produced tissue samples
Changes in mangrove blue carbon under elevated atmospheric CO2
17-Mar-2023
No conflict of interest.