Blue carbon benefits from global saltmarsh restoration

Coastal saltmarshes are found globally, yet are 25%–50% reduced compared with their historical cover. Restoration is incentivised by the promise that marshes are efficient storers of ‘blue’ carbon, although the claim lacks substantiation across global contexts. We synthesised data from 431 studies t...

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Veröffentlicht in:Global change biology 2023-12, Vol.29 (23), p.6517-6545
Hauptverfasser: Mason, Victoria G., Burden, Annette, Epstein, Graham, Jupe, Lucy L., Wood, Kevin A., Skov, Martin W.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Coastal saltmarshes are found globally, yet are 25%–50% reduced compared with their historical cover. Restoration is incentivised by the promise that marshes are efficient storers of ‘blue’ carbon, although the claim lacks substantiation across global contexts. We synthesised data from 431 studies to quantify the benefits of saltmarsh restoration to carbon accumulation and greenhouse gas uptake. The results showed global marshes store approximately 1.41–2.44 Pg carbon. Restored marshes had very low greenhouse gas (GHG) fluxes and rapid carbon accumulation, resulting in a mean net accumulation rate of 64.70 t CO2e ha−1 year−1. Using this estimate and potential restoration rates, we find saltmarsh regeneration could result in 12.93–207.03 Mt CO2e accumulation per year, offsetting the equivalent of up to 0.51% global energy‐related CO2 emissions—a substantial amount, considering marshes represent
ISSN:1354-1013
1365-2486
DOI:10.1111/gcb.16943