Peter Macreadie, head of the Blue Carbon Lab at Deakin University, shares this 
Frontiers Focus on strategies for managing tidal marshes, mangroves, and 
seagrass ecosystems to more efficiently capture and store carbon. His Concepts 
& Questions article appeared in the May 2017 issue of ESA Frontiers.

Read online 
http://www.esa.org/esablog/research/3-strategies-to-capture-carbon-in-coastal-ecosystems/

Five years ago the marine science world gave birth to a new term: “blue 
carbon,” which was created to describe the enormous and newly-recognized 
potential of the oceans to capture carbon and help slow climate change. Early 
estimates of the power of blue carbon were staggering ? they indicated that 
blue carbon habitats (seagrasses, saltmarshes, mangroves) ranked among the most 
efficient and permanent carbon sinks on the planet, far exceeding that of key 
carbon sinks on land (like rainforests).

However, the capacity of coastal ecosystems to capture carbon is threatened 
globally by coastal development and climate change. Resource managers are in 
urgent need of guidance to manage coasts to minimize carbon losses and maximize 
gains. In the May issue of Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, my 
colleagues and I propose three key environmental strategies that will help 
resource managers to get the best bang out of their blue carbon buck.

We draw upon knowledge from a broad range of environmental variables that 
influence the ability of coastal ecosystems to absorb and hold carbon, 
including warming, carbon dioxide levels, water depth, nutrients, runoff, 
disturbance of sediments by animals, physical disturbances, and tidal exchange. 
We discuss three potential management strategies that hold promise for 
optimizing coastal blue carbon sequestration:

1. Reduce nutrient flow into the system from industry, agriculture, and other 
human activities

2. Reinstate predators to control populations of burrowing animals that stir up 
sediments

3. Restore flow to coastal waterways

By means of case studies, we explore how these three strategies can minimize 
blue carbon losses and maximize gains.

Peter I Macreadie, Daniel A Nielsen, Jeffrey J Kelleway, Trisha B Atwood, 
Justin R Seymour, Katherina Petrou, Rod M Connolly, Alexandra CG Thomson, 
Stacey M Trevathan‐Tackett, Peter J Ralph (2017). Can we manage coastal 
ecosystems to sequester more blue carbon? Frontiers in Ecology and the 
Environment 15(4): 206?213, doi:10.1002/fee.1484

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