Temperate mangrove and salt marsh sediments are a small methane and nitrous oxide source but important carbon store
2012
Livesley, Stephen J. | Andrusiak, Sascha M.
Tidal saline wetlands (TSW), such as mangrove and salt marsh systems, provide many valuable ecosystem services, but continue to suffer disturbance, degradation and deforestation. Tropical mangroves perform a critical role in the exchange and storage of terrestrial–marine carbon but can function as a source of methane (CH₄) and nitrous oxide (N₂O). However, little is known of biogeochemical processes in temperate mangrove and salt marsh systems in the southern hemisphere. In this study, the soil/sediment exchange of CO₂, CH₄ and N₂O was measured seasonally along a natural transition from melaleuca woodland, salt marsh and into mangroves along the Mornington Peninsula edge of Westernport Bay, Victoria, Australia. Soil/sediment physiochemical properties and sediment C density were measured concurrently. The melaleuca woodland soil was a constant CH₄ sink of approximately −25 μg C m⁻² h⁻¹ but along the transect this rapidly switched to a weak CH₄ source (<5 μg C m⁻² h⁻¹) in the salt marsh which increased further in the mangrove sediments where emissions of up to 375 μg C m⁻² h⁻¹ were measured in summer. Sediment CH₄ exchange correlated with salinity, pneumatophore number and the redox potential of sediment water at depth. All three ecosystems were a small N₂O source of <10 μg N m⁻² h⁻¹. Soil–atmosphere exchange was dominated by CO₂ which showed a significant response according to ecosystem and season along with soil temperature and salinity. Sediment C density was significantly greater in the salt marsh than the mangrove. Salt marsh sediment C density was 168 Mg C ha⁻¹ which is comparable with that measured globally, whereas the mangrove sediment C density of 145 Mg C ha⁻¹ is among the lowest reported. Contrary to global patterns in terrestrial soil C content and salt marsh sediment C content, data from our study indicate that mangrove sediments from a cooler, drier temperate latitude may store less C than mangroves in warmer and wetter tropical latitudes. Understanding both C storage and the greenhouse gas balance of TSWs will help us to better value these vulnerable ecosystems and manage them accordingly.
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