Coastal and estuarine blue carbon stocks in the greater Southeast Asia region: Seagrasses and mangroves per nation and sum of total

Climate Change solutions include CO2 extraction from atmosphere and water with burial by living habitats in sediment/soil. Nowhere on the planet are blue carbon plants which carry out massive carbon extraction and permanent burial more intensely concentrated than in SE Asia. For the first time we ma...

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Main Authors: A. Thorhaug, John Barry Gallagher, Wawan Kiswara, Anchana Prathep, Xiaoping Huang, Yap, Tzuen Kiat, Sue Dorward M.Sc, Graeme Berlyn
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2020
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Online Access:https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/26343/1/Coastal%20and%20estuarine%20blue%20carbon%20stocks%20in%20the%20greater%20Southeast%20Asia%20region%20Seagrasses%20and%20mangroves%20per%20nation%20and%20sum%20of%20total.pdf
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spelling my.ums.eprints.263432020-11-24T02:56:02Z https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/26343/ Coastal and estuarine blue carbon stocks in the greater Southeast Asia region: Seagrasses and mangroves per nation and sum of total A. Thorhaug John Barry Gallagher Wawan Kiswara Anchana Prathep Xiaoping Huang Yap, Tzuen Kiat Sue Dorward M.Sc Graeme Berlyn Q Science (General) Climate Change solutions include CO2 extraction from atmosphere and water with burial by living habitats in sediment/soil. Nowhere on the planet are blue carbon plants which carry out massive carbon extraction and permanent burial more intensely concentrated than in SE Asia. For the first time we make a national and total inventory of data to date for “blue carbon” buried from mangroves and seagrass and delineate the constraints. For an area across Southeast Asia of approximately 12,000,000 km2, supporting mangrove forests (5,116,032 ha) and seagrass meadows (6,744,529 ha), we analyzed the region's current blue carbon stocks. This estimate was achieved by integrating the sum of estuarine in situ carbon stock measurements with the extent of mangroves and seagrass across each nation, then summed for the region. We found that mangroves ecosystems regionally supported the greater amount of organic carbon (3095.19Tg Corg in 1st meter) over that of seagrass (1683.97 Tg Corg in 1st meter), with corresponding stock densities ranging from 15 to 2205 Mg ha−1 and 31.3 to 2450 Mg ha−1 respectively, a likely underestimate for entire carbon including sediment depths. The largest carbon stocks are found within Indonesia, followed by the Philippines, Papua New Guinea, Myanmar, Malaysia, Thailand, Tropical China, Viet-Nam, and Cambodia. Compared to the blue carbon hotspot of tropical/subtropical Gulf of Mexico's total carbon stock (480.48 Tg Corg), Southeast Asia's greater mangrove–seagrass stock density appears a more intense Blue Carbon hotspot (4778.66 Tg Corg). All regional Southeast Asian nation states should assist in superior preservation and habitat restoration plus similar measures in the USA & Mexico for the Gulf of Mexico, as apparently these form two of the largest tropical carbon sinks within coastal waters. We hypothesize it is SE Asia's regionally unique oceanic–geologic conditions, placed squarely within the tropics, which are largely responsible for this blue carbon hotspot, that is, consistently high ambient light levels and year-long warm temperatures, together with consistently strong inflow of dissolved carbon dioxide and upwelling of nutrients across the shallow geological plates. 2020 Article PeerReviewed text en https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/26343/1/Coastal%20and%20estuarine%20blue%20carbon%20stocks%20in%20the%20greater%20Southeast%20Asia%20region%20Seagrasses%20and%20mangroves%20per%20nation%20and%20sum%20of%20total.pdf A. Thorhaug and John Barry Gallagher and Wawan Kiswara and Anchana Prathep and Xiaoping Huang and Yap, Tzuen Kiat and Sue Dorward M.Sc and Graeme Berlyn (2020) Coastal and estuarine blue carbon stocks in the greater Southeast Asia region: Seagrasses and mangroves per nation and sum of total. Marine Pollution Bulletin, 160.
institution Universiti Malaysia Sabah
building UMS Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaysia Sabah
content_source UMS Institutional Repository
url_provider http://eprints.ums.edu.my/
language English
topic Q Science (General)
spellingShingle Q Science (General)
A. Thorhaug
John Barry Gallagher
Wawan Kiswara
Anchana Prathep
Xiaoping Huang
Yap, Tzuen Kiat
Sue Dorward M.Sc
Graeme Berlyn
Coastal and estuarine blue carbon stocks in the greater Southeast Asia region: Seagrasses and mangroves per nation and sum of total
description Climate Change solutions include CO2 extraction from atmosphere and water with burial by living habitats in sediment/soil. Nowhere on the planet are blue carbon plants which carry out massive carbon extraction and permanent burial more intensely concentrated than in SE Asia. For the first time we make a national and total inventory of data to date for “blue carbon” buried from mangroves and seagrass and delineate the constraints. For an area across Southeast Asia of approximately 12,000,000 km2, supporting mangrove forests (5,116,032 ha) and seagrass meadows (6,744,529 ha), we analyzed the region's current blue carbon stocks. This estimate was achieved by integrating the sum of estuarine in situ carbon stock measurements with the extent of mangroves and seagrass across each nation, then summed for the region. We found that mangroves ecosystems regionally supported the greater amount of organic carbon (3095.19Tg Corg in 1st meter) over that of seagrass (1683.97 Tg Corg in 1st meter), with corresponding stock densities ranging from 15 to 2205 Mg ha−1 and 31.3 to 2450 Mg ha−1 respectively, a likely underestimate for entire carbon including sediment depths. The largest carbon stocks are found within Indonesia, followed by the Philippines, Papua New Guinea, Myanmar, Malaysia, Thailand, Tropical China, Viet-Nam, and Cambodia. Compared to the blue carbon hotspot of tropical/subtropical Gulf of Mexico's total carbon stock (480.48 Tg Corg), Southeast Asia's greater mangrove–seagrass stock density appears a more intense Blue Carbon hotspot (4778.66 Tg Corg). All regional Southeast Asian nation states should assist in superior preservation and habitat restoration plus similar measures in the USA & Mexico for the Gulf of Mexico, as apparently these form two of the largest tropical carbon sinks within coastal waters. We hypothesize it is SE Asia's regionally unique oceanic–geologic conditions, placed squarely within the tropics, which are largely responsible for this blue carbon hotspot, that is, consistently high ambient light levels and year-long warm temperatures, together with consistently strong inflow of dissolved carbon dioxide and upwelling of nutrients across the shallow geological plates.
format Article
author A. Thorhaug
John Barry Gallagher
Wawan Kiswara
Anchana Prathep
Xiaoping Huang
Yap, Tzuen Kiat
Sue Dorward M.Sc
Graeme Berlyn
author_facet A. Thorhaug
John Barry Gallagher
Wawan Kiswara
Anchana Prathep
Xiaoping Huang
Yap, Tzuen Kiat
Sue Dorward M.Sc
Graeme Berlyn
author_sort A. Thorhaug
title Coastal and estuarine blue carbon stocks in the greater Southeast Asia region: Seagrasses and mangroves per nation and sum of total
title_short Coastal and estuarine blue carbon stocks in the greater Southeast Asia region: Seagrasses and mangroves per nation and sum of total
title_full Coastal and estuarine blue carbon stocks in the greater Southeast Asia region: Seagrasses and mangroves per nation and sum of total
title_fullStr Coastal and estuarine blue carbon stocks in the greater Southeast Asia region: Seagrasses and mangroves per nation and sum of total
title_full_unstemmed Coastal and estuarine blue carbon stocks in the greater Southeast Asia region: Seagrasses and mangroves per nation and sum of total
title_sort coastal and estuarine blue carbon stocks in the greater southeast asia region: seagrasses and mangroves per nation and sum of total
publishDate 2020
url https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/26343/1/Coastal%20and%20estuarine%20blue%20carbon%20stocks%20in%20the%20greater%20Southeast%20Asia%20region%20Seagrasses%20and%20mangroves%20per%20nation%20and%20sum%20of%20total.pdf
https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/26343/
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score 13.18916