Key biogeochemical factors affecting soil carbon storage in Posidonia meadows

Serrano, OscarRicart, Aurora M.Lavery, Paul S.Mateo, Miguel ÁngelArias-Ortiz, ArianeMasqué, PereRozaimi, M.Steven, Andy D. L.Duarte, Carlos M.  Biogeosciences 13 : 4581-4594 (2016)  DIGITAL CSIC

Biotic and abiotic factors influence the accumulation of organic carbon (Corg/ in seagrass ecosystems.We surveyed Posidonia sinuosa meadows growing in different water depths to assess the variability in the sources, stocks and accumulation rates of Corg. We show that over the last 500 years, P. sinuosa meadows closer to the upper limit of distribution (at 2–4m depth) accumulated 3- to 4-fold higher Corg stocks (averaging 6.3 kgCorg m2/ at 3- to 4-fold higher rates (12.8 gCorg m2 yr1/ compared to meadows closer to the deep limits of distribution (at 6–8m depth; 1.8 kg Corg m2 and 3.6 g Corg m2 yr1/. In shallower meadows, Corg stocks were mostly derived from seagrass detritus (88% in average) compared to meadows closer to the deep limit of distribution (45% on average). In addition, soil accumulation rates and fine-grained sediment content (< 0.125 mm) in shallower meadows (2.0mmyr1 and 9 %, respectively) were approximately 2-fold higher than in deeper meadows (1.2mmyr1 and 5 %, respectively). The Corg stocks and accumulation rates accumulated over the last 500 years in bare sediments (0.6 kgCorg m2 and 1.2 g Corg m2 yr1/ were 3- to 11-fold lower than in P. sinuosa meadows, while fine-grained sediment content (1 %) and seagrass detritus contribution to the Corg pool (20 %) were 8- and 3-fold lower than in Posidonia meadows, respectively. The patterns found support the hypothesis that Corg storage in seagrass soils is influenced by interactions of biological (e.g., meadow productivity, cover and density), chemical (e.g., recalcitrance of Corg stocks) and physical (e.g., hydrodynamic energy and soil accumulation rates) factors within the meadow. We conclude that there is a need to improve global estimates of seagrass carbon storage accounting for biogeochemical factors driving variability within habitats.