Mapping Blue Carbon in Mangroves Worldwide
08/02/2018

New research led by LSU Department of Oceanography & Coastal Sciences Professor Robert Twilley offers a more precise estimate of how much blue carbon is stored by mangroves around the world. Photo Credit: LSU.
BATON ROUGE – Mangroves are tropical forests that thrive in salt water and are found
in a variety of coastal settings from deltas to estuaries to weathered reefs and limestone
rocks worldwide. Mangroves can store greater amounts of carbon than any other terrestrial
ecosystem, which helps reduce the amount of carbon dioxide and greenhouse gases in
the atmosphere. When carbon is stored in the ocean or coastal ecosystems, including
mangrove forests, it is called blue carbon. However, a more precise estimate of how
much blue carbon is stored by mangroves around the world has not been available until
recently. This research was published today in Ecological Society of America’s journal
Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment.
“While past estimates of blue carbon have done a remarkable job in delivering first
order estimates of how ecosystems mitigate carbon enrichment in the atmosphere, we
noted that the omission of unique coastal characteristics, such as tides and river
flow, reduced the accuracy of global predictions, especially concerning how carbon
storages may vary from one country to the next,” said lead author Robert Twilley,
who is a professor in the LSU College of the Coast & Environment’s Department of Oceanography
& Coastal Sciences and the executive director of the Louisiana Sea Grant College Program.
Twilley and colleagues overlaid a high resolution map of mangrove forest cover over
the various types of nearshore coastal environmental systems to calculate a more accurate
estimate of the amount of carbon stored by mangroves in its soil.
They found that blue carbon has been underestimated by up to 50 percent in coasts
with limestone rock, such as those found on the southern tip of Florida and in the
Caribbean. They also found that blue carbon has been overestimated by up to 86 percent
in coastal deltas in previous studies. In addition, this study provides new estimates
for about 57 countries that lack blue carbon data.
“We have developed a roadmap for ecological investigations on the global scale, highlighting
that there may be patterns that govern how mangroves store carbon from the atmosphere,”
said co-author Andre Rovai, who is a postdoctoral researcher in the LSU College of
the Coast & Environment’s Department of Oceanography & Coastal Sciences.
Having this roadmap is critical given how fast development and land-use changes are
occurring around the world. The scientists hope that planners will become more aware
of the environmental value of their country’s mangroves and take it into account before
losing these ecologically important resources.
Funding support for this work was provided by the National Science Foundation Coastal
SEES program, Frontiers of Earth Surface Dynamics, the Louisiana Sea Grant College
Program and CAPES/CNPq Science without Borders.
Twilley will also give the opening plenary talk at the Ecological Society of America
annual meeting on Sunday, Aug. 5, at 5 p.m. (CDT). His talk will be live streamed. He will also be presenting his research, The resilience of coastal deltaic floodplains, on Thursday, Aug. 9, at 10:10 a.m.
Additional Links:
Coastal morphology explains global blue carbon distributions, Frontiers in Ecology
and the Environment: https://esajournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/15409309
[doi: 10.1002/fee.1937]
Live stream to Ecological Society of America opening plenary talk titled “Ecosystem design approaches in a highly engineered landscape of the Mississippi River Delta” by Robert Twilley: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tN5U_pd4ZBY
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Contact Ernie Ballard
LSU Media Relations
225-578-5685
eballa1@lsu.edu
Alison Satake
LSU Media Relations
225-578-3870
asatake@lsu.edu