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Organic Carbon Burial Rates in Muddy Temperate Shelf Sea Sediments

  • Hannah Muir
  • , David G. Reading
  • , Phillip E. Warwick
  • , James A. Strong
  • , Kate Peel
  • , Rowan Henthorn
  • , Jacqui Keenan
  • , Peter F. Duncan
  • , Jan Geert Hiddink
  • , Martin Skov
  • , Richard K. F. Unsworth
  • , Claire Evans
  • Swansea University
  • University of Southampton
  • National Oceanography Centre
  • Isle of Man Government

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Abstract

Muddy continental shelf sediments act as important sinks for atmospheric CO2 by accumulating organic matter, a small fraction of which is buried and stored as organic carbon (OC) over long timescales. Quantifying long-term OC burial in shelf sediments is critical for understanding their role in climate regulation; however, this remains difficult due to limited age-resolved data and the challenges of determining sediment accumulation rates and temporal changes in OC content. To address this, we quantified age-resolved OC storage over the past two centuries in the upper 50 cm of the Western Irish Sea Mud Belt (WISMB) by measuring depth-resolved OC content and sediment accumulation rates. The OC content (0.15%–1.62%), OC storage (1.30–15.15 gC cm−3), and sediment accumulation rates (0.26–0.37 cm yr−1) vary both spatially and temporally, with the highest OC accumulation and burial occurring in muddier, deeper-water sediments. Between 53% and 91% of the OC accumulated in the surface 2 cm over the past 8 years (17.09–39.47 gC m−2 yr−1), and 60%–68% of the OC accumulated in the upper 10 cm over the past 38 years (21.90–51.13 gC m−2 yr−1), remains buried for more than 100 years (14.03–33.50 gC m−2 yr−1). These rates are comparable to those reported for other muddy continental shelf regions, including mud patches, coastal fjords, and glacial troughs.
Original languageEnglish
Article numbere2025JG009168
JournalJournal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences
Volume131
Issue number3
Early online date21 Mar 2026
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 21 Mar 2026

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