Logo image
Above- and Below-Ground Carbon Storage of Hydrologically Altered Mangrove Wetlands in Puerto Rico after a Hurricane
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Above- and Below-Ground Carbon Storage of Hydrologically Altered Mangrove Wetlands in Puerto Rico after a Hurricane

Lauren N. Griffiths, Elix Hernandez, Elvira Cuevas and William J. Mitsch
Plants (Basel), Vol.10(9), p.1965
09-01-2021
PMID: 34579497

Abstract

Life Sciences & Biomedicine Plant Sciences Science & Technology
Mangrove wetlands are important ecosystems, yet human development coupled with climate change threatens mangroves and their large carbon stores. This study seeks to understand the soil carbon dynamics in hydrologically altered mangrove swamps by studying aboveground biomass estimates and belowground soil carbon concentrations in mangrove swamps with high, medium, and low levels of disturbance in Catano, Jobos Bay, and Vieques, Puerto Rico. All three sites were affected by hurricane Maria in 2017, one year prior to the study. As a result of being hit by the Saffir-Simpson category 4 hurricane, the low-disturbance site had almost no living mangroves left during sampling. There was no correlation between level of hydrologic alteration and carbon storage, rather different patterns emerged for each of the three sites. At the highly disturbed location, belowground carbon mass averaged 0.048 +/- 0.001 g-C cm(-3) which increased with increased aboveground biomass. At the moderately disturbed location, belowground carbon mass averaged 0.047 +/- 0.003 g-C cm(-3) and corresponded to distance from open water. At the low-disturbed location, organic carbon was consistent between all sites and inorganic carbon concentrations controlled total carbon mass which averaged 0.048 +/- 0.002 g-C cm(-3). These results suggest that mangroves are adaptive and resilient and have the potential to retain their carbon storage capacities despite hydrologic alterations, but mass carbon storage within mangrove forests can be spatially variable in hydrologically altered conditions.
url
https://doi.org/10.3390/plants10091965View
Published (Version of record) Open

Related links

Metrics

14 Record Views
1 Times Cited - Scopus

Details

UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

This output has contributed to the advancement of the following goals:

#13 Climate Action
#14 Life Below Water
Logo image