A 2,000‐Year Record of Eelgrass (Zostera marina L.) Colonization Shows Substantial Gains in Blue Carbon Storage and Nutrient Retention
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/36642Dato
2024-03-11Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Dahl, Martin; Gullström, Martin; Bernabeu, Irene; Serrano, Oscar; Leiva-Dueñas, Carmen; Linderholm, Hans W.; Asplund, Maria E.; Björk, Mats; Ou, Tinghai; Svensson, Robin; Andrén, Elinor; Andrén, Thomas; Bergman, Sanne; Braun, Sara; Eklöf, Anneli; Ežerinskis, Zilvinas; Garbaras, Andrius; Hällberg, Petter; Löfgren, Elin; Kylander, Malin E.; Masqué, Pere; Šapolaitė, Justina; Smittenberg, Rienk; Mateo, Miguel A.Sammendrag
Assessing historical environmental conditions linked to habitat colonization is important for
understanding long‐term resilience and improving conservation and restoration efforts. Such information is
lacking for the seagrass Zostera marina, an important foundation species across cold‐temperate coastal areas of
the Northern Hemisphere. Here, we reconstructed environmental conditions during the last 14,000 years from
sediment cores in two eelgrass (Z. marina) meadows along the Swedish west coast, with the main aims to
identify the time frame of seagrass colonization and describe subsequent biogeochemical changes following
establishment. Based on vegetation proxies (lipid biomarkers), eelgrass colonization occurred about 2,000 years
ago after geomorphological changes that resulted in a shallow, sheltered environment favoring seagrass growth.
Seagrass establishment led to up to 20‐ and 24‐fold increases in sedimentary carbon and nitrogen accumulation
rates, respectively. This demonstrates the capacity of seagrasses as efficient ecosystem engineers and their role
in global change mitigation and adaptation through CO2 removal, and nutrient and sediment retention. By
combining regional climate projections and landscape models, we assessed potential climate change effects on
seagrass growth, productivity and distribution until 2100. These predictions showed that seagrass meadows are
mostly at risk from increased sedimentation and hydrodynamic changes, while the impact from sea level rise
alone might be of less importance in the studied area. This study showcases the positive feedback between
seagrass colonization and environmental conditions, which holds promise for successful conservation and
restoration efforts aimed at supporting climate change mitigation and adaptation, and the provision of several
other crucial ecosystem services.
Forlag
WileySitering
Dahl, Gullström, Bernabeu, Serrano, Leiva-Dueñas, Linderholm, Asplund, Björk, Ou, Svensson, Andrén, Andrén, Bergman, Braun, Eklöf, Ežerinskis, Garbaras, Hällberg, Löfgren, Kylander, Masqué, Šapolaitė, Smittenberg, Mateo. A 2,000‐Year Record of Eelgrass (Zostera marina L.) Colonization Shows Substantial Gains in Blue Carbon Storage and Nutrient Retention. Global Biogeochemical Cycles. 2024Metadata
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