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Sedimentary carbon on the continental shelf: Emerging capabilities and research priorities for Blue Carbon

Frontiers in Marine Science 2022 36 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Craig Smeaton, Carolyn Graves, Lisa Benson, John Aldridge, William E. N. Austin, Franck Dal Molin, Silke Kröger Vera G. Fonseca, Natalie Hicks, Clare Hynes, Clare Hynes, Silke Kröger Claire Mason, Claire Mason, Philip D. Lamb, Claire Mason, Claire Powell, Craig Smeaton, Sarah K. Wexler, Clare Woulds, Ruth Parker, Silke Kröger

Summary

This review presents a toolbox of methods for assessing organic carbon stored in continental shelf sediments, addressing how much carbon exists, how fast it accumulates, and how vulnerable it is to human activities like trawling within the expanding Blue Carbon framework.

Study Type Environmental

Continental shelf sediments store large amounts of organic carbon. Protecting this carbon from release back into the marine system and managing the marine environment to maximize its rate of accumulation could both play a role in mitigating climate change. For these reasons, in the context of an expanding “Blue Carbon” concept, research interest in the quantity and vulnerability of carbon stored in continental shelf, slope, and deep ocean sediments is increasing. In these systems, carbon storage is physically distant from carbon sources, altered between source and sink, and disturbed by anthropogenic activities. The methodological approaches needed to obtain the evidence to assess shelf sea sediment carbon manageability and vulnerability within an evolving blue carbon framework cannot be transferred directly from those applied in coastal vegetated “traditional” blue carbon habitats. We present a toolbox of methods which can be applied in marine sediments to provide the evidence needed to establish where and when marine carbon in offshore sediments can contribute to climate mitigation, focusing on continental shelf sediments. These methods are discussed in the context of the marine carbon cycle and how they provide evidence on: (i) stock: how much carbon is there and how is it distributed? (ii) accumulation: how rapidly is carbon being added or removed? and (iii) anthropogenic pressures: is carbon stock and/or accumulation vulnerable to manageable human activities? Our toolbox provides a starting point to inform choice of techniques for future studies alongside consideration of their specific research questions and available resources. Where possible, a stepwise approach to analyses should be applied in which initial parameters are analysed to inform which samples, if any, will provide information of interest from more resource-intensive analyses. As studies increasingly address the knowledge gaps around continental shelf carbon stocks and accumulation – through both sampling and modelling – the management of this carbon with respect to human pressures will become the key question for understanding where it fits within the blue carbon framework and within the climate mitigation discourse.

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