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Soil inorganic carbon in mangroves of tropical China: patterns and implications
Author(s) -
Wei Guan,
Yanmei Xiong,
Baowen Liao
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
biology letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.596
H-Index - 110
eISSN - 1744-957X
pISSN - 1744-9561
DOI - 10.1098/rsbl.2018.0483
Subject(s) - mangrove , soil water , total inorganic carbon , alkalinity , soil ph , carbonate , coral reef , calcium carbonate , soil test , soil carbon , biology , environmental chemistry , environmental science , ecology , carbon dioxide , chemistry , organic chemistry
Soil inorganic carbon (IC) is neglected in most blue carbon studies despite the globally significant role of the calcium carbonate cycle in ocean C balance and climate change. We sampled soils to 1 m depth from seven mangrove reserves in Hainan Island, China. Only 45 out of 509 samples were rich in IC (greater than 10 mg cm−3 ). Most of the IC-rich samples were found at the outer part of Qinglan Bay, which is adjacent to the largest coral reef zone of Hainan Island. Soil IC concentration ranged from 0 to 66 g kg−1 (or 0–67 mg cm−3 ), accounting for 0–92% of total C. IC concentration increased with soil depth where it was abundant. Soil pH was low (2.36–6.59) in IC-depleted soils, but increased to 5.67–7.99 in IC-rich soils. Soil total C stock and IC stock in mangroves of Hainan amounted to 0.76×106 and 0.12×106 Mg, respectively, with IC accounting for 16% of total C. Our study finds that carbonate concentrations can be high in mangrove soils but their spatial distribution indicates they are largely allochthonous in origin. Evidence of carbonate dissolution in mangroves suggests mangroves may increase total alkalinity to buffer acidification in seawater.

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