Carbon Cycling in the World's Mangrove Ecosystems Revisited: Significance of Non-Steady State Diagenesis and Subsurface Linkages between the Forest Floor and the Coastal Ocean

被引:48
作者
Alongi, Daniel M. [1 ]
机构
[1] Trop Coastal & Mangrove Consultants, 52 Shearwater Dr, Pakenham, Vic 3810, Australia
关键词
biogeochemistry; carbon; carbon cycling; coastal ocean; export; non-steady-state; mangrove; mangrove carbon budget; moil; subsurface transport; GREENHOUSE-GAS FLUXES; ORGANIC-CARBON; TIDAL CREEK; GROUNDWATER DISCHARGE; SUBTROPICAL MANGROVE; BENTHIC METABOLISM; SULFATE REDUCTION; SOIL RESPIRATION; SEDIMENT ACCUMULATION; OXYGEN-CONSUMPTION;
D O I
10.3390/f11090977
中图分类号
S7 [林业];
学科分类号
0829 ; 0907 ;
摘要
Carbon cycling within the deep mangrove forest floor is unique compared to other marine ecosystems with organic carbon input, mineralization, burial, and advective and groundwater export pathways being in non-steady-state, often oscillating in synchrony with tides, plant uptake, and release/uptake via roots and other edaphic factors in a highly dynamic and harsh environment. Rates of soil organic carbon (C-ORG) mineralization and belowground C-ORG stocks are high, with rapid diagenesis throughout the deep (>1 m) soil horizon. Pocketed with cracks, fissures, extensive roots, burrows, tubes, and drainage channels through which tidal waters percolate and drain, the forest floor sustains non-steady-state diagenesis of the soil C-ORG,C- in which decomposition processes at the soil surface are distinct from those in deeper soils. Aerobic respiration occurs within the upper 2 mm of the soil surface and within biogenic structures. On average, carbon respiration across the surface soil-air/water interface (104 mmol C m(-2) d(-1)) equates to only 25% of the total carbon mineralized within the entire soil horizon, as nearly all respired carbon (569 mmol C m(-2) d(-1)) is released in a dissolved form via advective porewater exchange and/or lateral transport and subsurface tidal pumping to adjacent tidal waters. A carbon budget for the world's mangrove ecosystems indicates that subsurface respiration is the second-largest respiratory flux after canopy respiration. Dissolved carbon release is sufficient to oversaturate water-column pCO(2,) causing tropical coastal waters to be a source of CO2 to the atmosphere. Mangrove dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) discharge contributes nearly 60% of DIC and 27% of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) discharge from the world's low latitude rivers to the tropical coastal ocean. Mangroves inhabit only 0.3% of the global coastal ocean area but contribute 55% of air-sea exchange, 14% of C-ORG burial, 28% of DIC export, and 13% of DOC + particulate organic matter (POC) export from the world's coastal wetlands and estuaries to the atmosphere and global coastal ocean.
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页数:17
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