Mapping and assessing seagrass meadows changes and blue carbon under past, current, and future scenarios
Fecha
2023
Título de la revista
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Editor
Elsevier
Resumen
Seagrasses store large amounts of blue carbon and mitigate climate change, but they have suffered strong regressions
worldwide in recent decades. Blue carbon assessments may support their conservation. However, existing blue carbon
maps are still scarce and focused on certain seagrass species, such as the iconic genus Posidonia, and intertidal and very
shallow seagrasses (<10 m depth), while deep-water and opportunistic seagrasses have remained understudied. This
study filled this gap by mapping and assessing blue carbon storage and sequestration by the seagrass Cymodocea nodosa
in the Canarian archipelago using the local carbon storage capacity and high spatial resolution (20 m/pixel) seagrass
distribution maps for the years 2000 and 2018. Particularly, we mapped and assessed the past, current and future capacity of C. nodosa to store blue carbon, according to four plausible future scenarios, and valued the economic implications of these scenarios. Our results showed that C. nodosa has suffered ca. 50 % area loss in the last two decades,
and, if the current degradation rate continues, our estimations demonstrate that it could completely disappear in
2036 (“Collapse scenario”). The impact of these losses in 2050 would reach 1.43 MT of CO2 equivalent emitted
with a cost of 126.3 million € (0.32 % of the current Canary GDP). If, however, this degradation is slow down, between
0.11 and 0.57 MT of CO2 equivalent would be emitted until 2050 (“Intermediate” and “Business-as-usual” scenarios,
respectively), which corresponds to a social cost of 3.63 and 44.81 million €, respectively. If the current seagrass extension is maintained (“No Net Loss”), 0.75 MT of CO2 equivalent would be sequestered from now to 2050, which corresponds to a social cost saving of 73.59 million €. The reproducibility of our methodology across coastal ecosystems
underpinned by marine vegetation provides a key tool for decision-making and conservation of these habitats.
Descripción
This work was supported by the European Union under the MOVE-ON project “From case studies to anchor projects - setting the ground to advance MAES in Europe's overseas”, grant agreement Nº07.027735/2019/808239/SUB/ENV.D2, https://moveon-project.eu/.
We also thank the Biodiversity Service of the Canarian Government for providing cartographic databases, as well as to Alberto Gonzalez-García and Adrián García Bruzón for their generous support with the InVEST and ArcGIS software.
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Citación
Miriam Montero-Hidalgo, Fernando Tuya, Francisco Otero-Ferrer, Ricardo Haroun, Fernando Santos-Martín, Mapping and assessing seagrass meadows changes and blue carbon under past, current, and future scenarios, Science of The Total Environment, Volume 872, 2023, 162244, ISSN 0048-9697, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.162244
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