Document of bibliographic reference 355364

BibliographicReference record

Type
Bibliographic resource
Type of document
Journal article
BibLvlCode
AS
Title
Nordic blue carbon ecosystems: status and outlook
Abstract
Vegetated coastal and marine habitats in the Nordic region include salt marshes, eelgrass meadows and, in particular, brown macroalgae (kelp forests and rockweed beds). Such habitats contribute to storage of organic carbon (Blue Carbon – BC) and support coastal protection, biodiversity and water quality. Protection and restoration of these habitats therefore have the potential to deliver climate change mitigation and co-benefits. Here we present the existing knowledge on Nordic BC habitats in terms of habitat area, C-stocks and sequestration rates, co-benefits, policies and management status to inspire a coherent Nordic BC roadmap. The area extent of BC habitats in the region is incompletely assessed, but available information sums up to 1,440 km2 salt marshes, 1,861 (potentially 2,735) km2 seagrass meadows, and 16,532 km2 (potentially 130,735 km2, including coarse Greenland estimates) brown macroalgae, yielding a total of 19,833 (potentially 134,910) km2. Saltmarshes and seagrass meadows have experienced major declines over the past century, while macroalgal trends are more diverse. Based on limited salt marsh data, sediment C-stocks average 3,311 g Corg m-2 (top 40-100 cm) and sequestration rates average 142 g Corg m-2 yr-1. Eelgrass C-stocks average 2,414 g Corg m-2 (top 25 cm) and initial data for sequestration rates range 5-33 g Corg m-2, quantified for one Greenland site and one short term restoration. For Nordic brown macroalgae, peer-reviewed estimates of sediment C-stock and sequestration are lacking. Overall, the review reveals substantial Nordic BC-stocks, but highlights that evidence is still insufficient to provide a robust estimate of all Nordic BC-stocks and sequestration rates. Needed are better quantification of habitat area, C-stocks and fluxes, particularly for macroalgae, as well as identification of target areas for BC management. The review also points to directives and regulations protecting Nordic marine vegetation, and local restoration initiatives with potential to increase C-sequestration but underlines that increased coordination at national and Nordic scales and across sectors is needed. We propose a Nordic BC roadmap for science and management to maximize the potential of BC habitats to mitigate climate change and support coastal protection, biodiversity and additional ecosystem functions.
WebOfScience code
https://www.webofscience.com/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:000811063000001
Bibliographic citation
Krause-Jensen, D.; Gundersen, H.; Björk, M.; Gullström, M.; Dahl, M.; Asplund, M.E.; Boström, C.; Holmer, M.; Banta, G.T.; Graversen, A.E.L.; Pedersen, M.F.; Bekkby, T.; Frigstad, H.; Skjellum, S.F.; Thormar, J.; Gyldenkærne, S.; Howard, J.; Pidgeon, E.; Ragnarsdóttir, S.B.; Mols-Mortensen, A.; Hancke, K. (2022). Nordic blue carbon ecosystems: status and outlook. Front. Mar. Sci. 9: 847544. https://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2022.847544
Topic
Marine
Is peer reviewed
true
Access rights
open access
Is accessible for free
true

Authors

author
Name
Dorte Krause-Jensen
author
Name
Hege Gundersen
author
Name
Mats Björk
author
Name
Martin Gullström
author
Name
Martin Dahl
author
Name
Maria Asplund
author
Name
Christoffer Boström
author
Name
Marianne Holmer
author
Name
Gary Banta
author
Name
Anna Graversen
author
Name
Morten Pedersen
author
Name
Trine Bekkby
author
Name
Helene Frigstad
author
Name
Solrun Skjellum
author
Name
Jonas Thormar
author
Name
Steen Gyldenkærne
author
Name
Jennifer Howard
author
Name
Emily Pidgeon
author
Name
Sunna Ragnarsdóttir
author
Name
Agnes Mols-Mortensen
author
Name
Kasper Hancke

Links

referenced creativework
type
DOI
accessURL
https://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2022.847544

Document metadata

date created
2022-09-12
date modified
2022-09-12