Estuarine and Coastal Ocean Carbon Paradox: CO 2 Sinks or Sites of Terrestrial Carbon Incineration?
Indexed incrossrefpubmed
Abstract
Estuaries are a major boundary in the land-ocean interaction zone where organic carbon (OC) and nutrients are being processed, resulting in a high water-to-air carbon dioxide (CO2) flux (approximately 0.25 Pg C y(-1)). The continental shelves, however, take up CO2 (approximately 0.25 Pg C y(-1)) from the atmosphere, accounting for approximately 17% of open ocean CO2 uptake (1.5 Pg Cy(-1)). It is demonstrated here that CO2 release in estuaries is largely supported by microbial decomposition of highly productive intertidal marsh biomass. It appears that riverine OC, however, would bypass the estuarine zone, because of short river-transit times, and contribute to carbon cycling in the ocean margins and interiors.…
Citation impact
878
total citations
- FWCI
- 27.32
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 98
Citations per year
Authors
1Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Oceanography
- Environmental science
- Carbon sink
- Estuary
- Carbon cycle
- Blue carbon
- Atmosphere (unit)
- Carbon dioxide
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Life below water
No related works found for this paper.