And opportunity for a spot of geoeng, methinks!

A

 *The vital role of Ocean Floor flora*

The Times on Line of October 14th reports how Marine plant life,
though covering less than 1 per cent of the world's seabed, holds the secret
to the prevention of global warming. The item details how the now rapidly
disappearing salt marshes and seagrass beds lock away well over half of all
carbon to be buried in the ocean floor.


For the full report go to 'Marine plant life holds the secret to preventing
global warming' at:

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/science/earth-environment/article6873403.ece


Life in the ocean has the potential to help to prevent global warming,
according to a report published today.

Marine plant life sucks 2 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide from the
atmosphere every year, but most of the plankton responsible never reaches
the seabed to become a permanent carbon store.

Mangrove forests, salt marshes and seagrass beds are a different matter.
Although together they cover less than 1 per cent of the world’s seabed,
they lock away well over half of all carbon to be buried in the ocean floor.
They are estimated to store 1,650 million tonnes of carbon dioxide every
year — nearly half of global transport emissions — making them one of the
most intense carbon sinks on Earth.

Their capacity to absorb the emissions is under threat, however: the
habitats are being lost at a rate of up to 7 per cent a year, up to 15 times
faster than the tropical rainforests. A third have already been lost.
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Halting their destruction could be one of the easiest ways of reducing
future emissions, says report, *Blue Carbon,* a UN collaboration.

With 50 per cent of the world’s population living within 65 miles of the
sea, human pressures on nearshore waters are powerful. Since the 1940s,
parts of Asia have lost up to 90 per cent of their mangrove forests, robbing
both spawning fish and local people of sanctuary from storms.

The salt marshes near estuaries and deltas have suffered a similar fate as
they are drained to make room for development. Rich in animal life, they
harbour a huge biomass of carbon-fixing vegetation. Seagrass beds often
raise the level of the seabed by up to three metres as they bury mats of
dead grass but turbid water is threatening their access to sunlight.

“We already know that marine ecosystems are multi-trillion-dollar assets
linked to sectors such as tourism, coastal defence, fisheries and water
purification services. Now it is emerging that they are natural allies
against climate change,” said Achin Steiner, UN Under-Secretary General.

The potential contribution of blue carbon sinks has been ignored up to now,
says the report, which was a collaboration between theUnited Nations
Environment Programme <http://www.unep.org/>, the Food and Agriculture
Organisation <http://www.fao.org/> and
Unesco<http://portal.unesco.org/en/ev.php-URL_ID=29008&URL_DO=DO_TOPIC&URL_SECTION=201.html>.
Accurate figures for the extent of these habitats are hard to obtain, and
may be more than twice the lower estimates used in the report.

“The carbon burial capacity of marine vegetated habitats is phenomenal, 180
times greater than the average burial rate in the open ocean,” say the
authors. As a result they lock away between 50 and 70 per cent of the
organic carbon in the ocean.

To protect them the authors suggest that a Blue Carbon Fund be launched to
help developing nations to protect the habitats. Oceanic carbon sinks should
also be traded in the same fashion as terrestrial forests, they say.
Together with the UN’s scheme to reduce deforestation, they could deliver up
to 25 per cent of emission reductions needed to keep global warming below 2C
(3.5F).

Christian Nellemann, the editor of the report said:“On current trends they
[ecosystems] may be all largely lost within a couple of decades.”

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