Blue carbon gains from glacial retreat along Antarctic fjords: what should we expect?

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Standard Standard

Blue carbon gains from glacial retreat along Antarctic fjords: what should we expect? / Barnes, David; Sands, Chester; Cook, Alison et al.
In: Global Change Biology, Vol. 26, No. 5, 05.2020, p. 2750-2755.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

HarvardHarvard

Barnes, D, Sands, C, Cook, A, Howard, F, Román González, A, Muñoz-Ramirez, C, Retallick, K, Scourse, J, Van Landeghem, K & Zwerschke, N 2020, 'Blue carbon gains from glacial retreat along Antarctic fjords: what should we expect?', Global Change Biology, vol. 26, no. 5, pp. 2750-2755. https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.15055

APA

Barnes, D., Sands, C., Cook, A., Howard, F., Román González, A., Muñoz-Ramirez, C., Retallick, K., Scourse, J., Van Landeghem, K., & Zwerschke, N. (2020). Blue carbon gains from glacial retreat along Antarctic fjords: what should we expect? Global Change Biology, 26(5), 2750-2755. https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.15055

CBE

Barnes D, Sands C, Cook A, Howard F, Román González A, Muñoz-Ramirez C, Retallick K, Scourse J, Van Landeghem K, Zwerschke N. 2020. Blue carbon gains from glacial retreat along Antarctic fjords: what should we expect?. Global Change Biology. 26(5):2750-2755. https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.15055

MLA

VancouverVancouver

Barnes D, Sands C, Cook A, Howard F, Román González A, Muñoz-Ramirez C et al. Blue carbon gains from glacial retreat along Antarctic fjords: what should we expect? Global Change Biology. 2020 May;26(5):2750-2755. Epub 2020 Mar 23. doi: 10.1111/gcb.15055

Author

Barnes, David ; Sands, Chester ; Cook, Alison et al. / Blue carbon gains from glacial retreat along Antarctic fjords: what should we expect?. In: Global Change Biology. 2020 ; Vol. 26, No. 5. pp. 2750-2755.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Blue carbon gains from glacial retreat along Antarctic fjords: what should we expect?

AU - Barnes, David

AU - Sands, Chester

AU - Cook, Alison

AU - Howard, Floyd

AU - Román González, Alejandro

AU - Muñoz-Ramirez, Carlos

AU - Retallick, Kate

AU - Scourse, James

AU - Van Landeghem, Katrien

AU - Zwerschke, Nadescha

N1 - © 2020 The Authors. Global Change Biology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

PY - 2020/5

Y1 - 2020/5

N2 - Rising atmospheric CO 2 is intensifying climate change but it is also driving global and particularly polar greening. However, most blue carbon sinks (that held by marine organisms) are shrinking, which is important as these are hotspots of genuine carbon sequestration. Polar blue carbon increases with losses of marine ice over high latitude continental shelf areas. Marine ice (sea ice, ice shelf and glacier retreat) losses generate a valuable negative feedback on climate change. Blue carbon change with sea ice and ice shelf losses has been estimated, but not how blue carbon responds to glacier retreat along fjords. We derive a testable estimate of glacier retreat driven blue carbon gains by investigating three fjords in the West Antarctic Peninsula (WAP). We started by multiplying ~40 year mean glacier retreat rates by the number of retreating WAP fjords and their time of exposure. We multiplied this area by regional zoobenthic carbon means from existing datasets to suggest that WAP fjords generate 3,130 tonnes of new zoobenthic carbon per year (t zC/year) and sequester >780 t zC/year. We tested this by capture and analysis of 204 high resolution seabed images along emerging WAP fjords. Biota within these images were identified to density per 13 functional groups. Mean stored carbon per individual was assigned from literature values to give a stored zoobenthic Carbon per area, which was multiplied up by area of fjord exposed over time, which increased the estimate to 4,536 t zC/year. The purpose of this study was to establish a testable estimate of blue carbon change caused by glacier retreat along Antarctic fjords and thus to establish its relative importance compared to polar and other carbon sinks.

AB - Rising atmospheric CO 2 is intensifying climate change but it is also driving global and particularly polar greening. However, most blue carbon sinks (that held by marine organisms) are shrinking, which is important as these are hotspots of genuine carbon sequestration. Polar blue carbon increases with losses of marine ice over high latitude continental shelf areas. Marine ice (sea ice, ice shelf and glacier retreat) losses generate a valuable negative feedback on climate change. Blue carbon change with sea ice and ice shelf losses has been estimated, but not how blue carbon responds to glacier retreat along fjords. We derive a testable estimate of glacier retreat driven blue carbon gains by investigating three fjords in the West Antarctic Peninsula (WAP). We started by multiplying ~40 year mean glacier retreat rates by the number of retreating WAP fjords and their time of exposure. We multiplied this area by regional zoobenthic carbon means from existing datasets to suggest that WAP fjords generate 3,130 tonnes of new zoobenthic carbon per year (t zC/year) and sequester >780 t zC/year. We tested this by capture and analysis of 204 high resolution seabed images along emerging WAP fjords. Biota within these images were identified to density per 13 functional groups. Mean stored carbon per individual was assigned from literature values to give a stored zoobenthic Carbon per area, which was multiplied up by area of fjord exposed over time, which increased the estimate to 4,536 t zC/year. The purpose of this study was to establish a testable estimate of blue carbon change caused by glacier retreat along Antarctic fjords and thus to establish its relative importance compared to polar and other carbon sinks.

KW - Blue carbon

KW - Southern Ocean

KW - climate change

KW - fjord

KW - glacier retreat

KW - sequestration

U2 - 10.1111/gcb.15055

DO - 10.1111/gcb.15055

M3 - Article

C2 - 32108972

VL - 26

SP - 2750

EP - 2755

JO - Global Change Biology

JF - Global Change Biology

SN - 1365-2486

IS - 5

ER -