Poster's note : another study showing the importance of ecosystem
management for C storage. Plain English summary at (
http://app.rdmag.com/news/2015/05/study-backs-seaweeds-carbon-capture-potential
)

http://www.esajournals.org/doi/abs/10.1890/15-0149.1

Stacey M. Trevathan-Tackett, Jeffrey J. Kelleway, Peter Ian Macreadie, John
Beardall, Peter Ralph, and Alecia Bellgrove
In press.

Comparison of marine macrophytes for their contributions to blue carbon
sequestration.

Ecology.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1890/15-0149.1

Comparison of marine macrophytes for their contributions to blue carbon
sequestration

Many marine ecosystems have the capacity for long-term storage of organic
carbon (C) in what are termed 'blue-carbon' systems. While blue carbon
systems (saltmarsh, mangrove and seagrass) are efficient at long-term
sequestration of organic carbon (C), much of their sequestered C may
originate from other (allochthonous) habitats. Macroalgae, due to their
high rates of production, fragmentation and ability to be transported,
would also appear to be able to make a significant contribution as C donors
to blue C habitats. In order to assess the stability of macroalgal tissues
and their likely contribution to long-term pools of C, we applied
thermogravimetric analysis (TGA) to 14 taxa of marine macroalgae and
coastal vascular plants. We assessed the structural complexity of multiple
lineages of plant and tissue types with differing cell-wall structures and
found that decomposition dynamics varied significantly according to
differences in cell wall structure and composition among taxonomic groups
and tissue function (photosynthetic v attachment). Vascular plant tissues
generally exhibited greater stability with a greater proportion of mass
loss at temperatures >300°C (peak mass loss ~320°C) than macroalgae (peak
mass loss between 175 -300 °C), consistent with the lignocellulose matrix
of vascular plants. Greater variation in thermogravimetric signatures
within and among macroalgal taxa, relative to vascular plants, was also
consistent with the diversity of cell wall structure and composition
amongst groups. Significant degradation above 600°C for some macroalgae, as
well as some below-ground seagrass tissues is likely due to the presence of
taxon-specific compounds. The results of this study highlight the
importance of the lignocellulose matrix to the stability of vascular plant
sources and the potentially significant role of refractory, taxon-specific
compounds (carbonates, long-chain lipids, alginates, xylans and sulfated
polysaccharides) from macroalgae and seagrasses for their long-term
sedimentary C storage.

This study shows that marine macroalgae do contain refractory compounds and
thus may be more valuable to long-term carbon sequestration than we
previously have considered.

*To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail:
[email protected]

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