0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Environmental Sources Marine & Wildlife Policy & Risk Sign in to save

Study on the Impact of Offshore Pollution on Carbon Sinks in the South China Sea - Based on Data from Offshore Cities in the South China Sea

Journal of civil and transportation engineering. 2024 Score: 35 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
F.‐S. HAN

Summary

Researchers investigated the impact of offshore pollution on carbon sink function in the South China Sea, analysing empirical data from coastal cities in Guangdong Province. They found that industrial, agricultural, and urban discharge pollutants disrupted phytoplankton communities, weakened atmosphere-ocean carbon exchange, and made coastal wetlands and mangrove forests vulnerable, significantly reducing the region's carbon sequestration capacity.

Study Type Environmental

This study aims to explore the impacts of offshore pollution in the South China Sea on the carbon sink function, focusing on the environmental context of coastal cities in Guangdong Province and their carbon sink ecosystem response mechanisms. The study shows that the current offshore areas of the South China Sea have a wide range of pollutants, mainly from industrial activities, agricultural practices and urban sewage discharges, and the continuous accumulation of these pollutants poses a significant threat to the marine ecosystem, leading to a significant weakening of the carbon sink function. By analysing empirical data from coastal cities in Guangdong Province, it was found that the structure and function of phytoplankton communities were disturbed by pollution, which in turn affected the process of atmosphere-ocean carbon exchange. Changes in carbon fluxes in sediments reflected the vulnerability of ecosystems such as coastal wetlands and mangrove forests under the pressure of carrying pollution. We further applied statistical analysis and model construction methods to systematically process the data samples to verify the negative effects of pollution on carbon sinks. The conclusions of this study call for the strengthening of regional environmental protection strategy and public environmental awareness, and the promotion of ecosystem restoration and protection to maintain the ecological security of the South China Sea and the sustainability of its carbon sinks.

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

Impact of elevated environmental pollutants on carbon storage in mangrove wetlands: A comprehensive review

Researchers synthesized global studies on pollutant impacts in mangrove wetlands — which store about 10% of coastal ocean carbon — finding that microplastics reduce carbon stocks by 1-12% by impairing photosynthesis and destabilizing sediments, while heavy metals and oil spills compound the damage to these critical climate carbon sinks.

Article Tier 2

New Insights into the Microplastic Enrichment in the Blue Carbon Ecosystem: Evidence from Seagrass Meadows and Mangrove Forests in Coastal South China Sea

Researchers studied how seagrass meadows and mangrove forests in the South China Sea trap microplastics, finding enrichment of 1.3 to 17.6 times compared to unvegetated sites, with a strong positive correlation between microplastic abundance and organic carbon content (Pearson R = 0.86).

Article Tier 2

Microplastics in Surface Waters and Sediments from Guangdong Coastal Areas, South China

Microplastics were detected in surface waters and sediments across coastal areas of Guangdong Province in South China, with higher concentrations near urban centers and river mouths reflecting the region's dense population and industrial activity.

Article Tier 2

Multidimensional Assessment of Microplastic Pollution in Mangrove Wetlands: Driving Mechanisms, Carbon Contribution, and Ecological Risk

Scientists found tiny plastic particles called microplastics throughout mangrove wetlands in China, with the highest levels in areas used for fishing and fish farming. These plastic particles are building up in the sediment and water, creating pollution hotspots that pose moderate ecological risks to these important coastal ecosystems. This matters because mangroves help protect coastlines and support marine life that humans depend on for food, so plastic pollution in these areas could ultimately affect our food supply and coastal protection.

Article Tier 2

The distribution, characteristics and ecological risks of microplastics in the mangroves of Southern China

Microplastics were found to be widespread in mangrove sediments across Southern China, with higher concentrations in areas closer to urban development and aquaculture. The study highlights mangroves as accumulation zones for microplastic pollution, which could threaten these ecologically important coastal ecosystems.

Share this paper