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handle: 10261/130207
Seagrasses of the genus Posidonia can form an irregular seascape due to erosional processes exposing thick walls of organic matter-rich soils. However, little is known about the location and characteristics of these particular formations. Here we provide comprehensive estimates of organic carbon (Corg) storage in P. oceanica and P. australis meadows, while providing insight into their location and mechanisms of formation, and highlighting future research directions. Erosional reef escarpments are restricted to shallow highly productive P. oceanica meadows from the Mediterranean Sea and P. australis meadows from the Indian Ocean, and sustain the existence of Corg-rich deposits in surrounding meadows. The thickness of the mat escarpments can reach up to 3 m and their length can vary from few to hundreds meters. Mechanisms of formation appear to differ among sites, from naturally-induced escarpments by wave action and/or tidal flow to human-induced escarpments by dredging activities. The inter-twined remains of seagrass shoots within the sediment matrix consolidate the sandy substrate and hold the exposed Posidonia mat escarpments together, maintaining a semi-rigid structure. This phenomenon is unusual but of exceptional importance in marine biogeochemical cycles, revealing the largest Corg sinks among seagrasses worldwide (ranging from 15-176 kg Corg m-2 in 2 m-thick mats accumulated at 2-249 g Corg m-2 yr-1 over 300 to 3000 yr).
This work was supported by the projects ECU Faculty Research Grant Scheme, the ECU Early Career Research Grant Scheme, the CSIRO Flagship Marine & Coastal Carbon Biogeochemical Cluster (Coastal Carbon Cluster), and the project SUMILEN (CTM2013-47728-R, Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness).
1 figura, 1 tabla
Peer reviewed
570, 550, Posidonia australis, seagrass, Science, QH1-199.5, 551, blue carbon, Mediterranean Sea, Ecosystem services, Marine Science, Posidonia, Indian Ocean, Blue carbon, marine ecology, Q, Life Sciences, General. Including nature conservation, geographical distribution, Posidonia oceanica, biogeochemical cycles, erosion, Biogeochemical cycles, ecosystem services
570, 550, Posidonia australis, seagrass, Science, QH1-199.5, 551, blue carbon, Mediterranean Sea, Ecosystem services, Marine Science, Posidonia, Indian Ocean, Blue carbon, marine ecology, Q, Life Sciences, General. Including nature conservation, geographical distribution, Posidonia oceanica, biogeochemical cycles, erosion, Biogeochemical cycles, ecosystem services
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