Skip to main content
Advertisement
Browse Subject Areas
?

Click through the PLOS taxonomy to find articles in your field.

For more information about PLOS Subject Areas, click here.

  • Loading metrics

Estimating Global “Blue Carbon” Emissions from Conversion and Degradation of Vegetated Coastal Ecosystems

  • Linwood Pendleton ,

    Contributed equally to this work with: Linwood Pendleton, Daniel C. Donato

    Affiliation Nicholas Institute for Environmental Policy Solutions, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina, United States of America

  • Daniel C. Donato ,

    Contributed equally to this work with: Linwood Pendleton, Daniel C. Donato

    ddonato@wisc.edu

    Affiliation Ecosystem & Landscape Ecology Lab, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin, United States of America

  • Brian C. Murray,

    Affiliation Nicholas Institute for Environmental Policy Solutions, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina, United States of America

  • Stephen Crooks,

    Affiliation ESA Phillip Williams & Associates, San Francisco, California, United States of America

  • W. Aaron Jenkins,

    Affiliation Nicholas Institute for Environmental Policy Solutions, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina, United States of America

  • Samantha Sifleet,

    Affiliation United States Environmental Protection Agency, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina, United States of America

  • Christopher Craft,

    Affiliation School of Public and Environmental Affairs, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana, United States of America

  • James W. Fourqurean,

    Affiliation Department of Biological Sciences and Southeast Environmental Research Center, Florida International University, North Miami, Florida, United States of America

  • J. Boone Kauffman,

    Affiliation Department of Fisheries and Wildlife, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon, United States of America and Center for International Forest Research, Bogor, Indonesia

  • Núria Marbà,

    Affiliation Department of Global Change Research, Mediterranean Institute for Advanced Studies, Esporles, Illes Balears, Spain

  • Patrick Megonigal,

    Affiliation Smithsonian Environmental Research Center, Edgewater, Maryland, United States of America

  • Emily Pidgeon,

    Affiliation Conservation International, Arlington, Virginia, United States of America

  • Dorothee Herr,

    Affiliation International Union for the Conservation of Nature, Washington, District of Columbia, United States of America

  • David Gordon,

    Affiliation Nicholas Institute for Environmental Policy Solutions, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina, United States of America

  • Alexis Baldera

    Affiliation The Ocean Conservancy, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, United States of America

Abstract

Recent attention has focused on the high rates of annual carbon sequestration in vegetated coastal ecosystems—marshes, mangroves, and seagrasses—that may be lost with habitat destruction (‘conversion’). Relatively unappreciated, however, is that conversion of these coastal ecosystems also impacts very large pools of previously-sequestered carbon. Residing mostly in sediments, this ‘blue carbon’ can be released to the atmosphere when these ecosystems are converted or degraded. Here we provide the first global estimates of this impact and evaluate its economic implications. Combining the best available data on global area, land-use conversion rates, and near-surface carbon stocks in each of the three ecosystems, using an uncertainty-propagation approach, we estimate that 0.15–1.02 Pg (billion tons) of carbon dioxide are being released annually, several times higher than previous estimates that account only for lost sequestration. These emissions are equivalent to 3–19% of those from deforestation globally, and result in economic damages of $US 6–42 billion annually. The largest sources of uncertainty in these estimates stems from limited certitude in global area and rates of land-use conversion, but research is also needed on the fates of ecosystem carbon upon conversion. Currently, carbon emissions from the conversion of vegetated coastal ecosystems are not included in emissions accounting or carbon market protocols, but this analysis suggests they may be disproportionally important to both. Although the relevant science supporting these initial estimates will need to be refined in coming years, it is clear that policies encouraging the sustainable management of coastal ecosystems could significantly reduce carbon emissions from the land-use sector, in addition to sustaining the well-recognized ecosystem services of coastal habitats.

Introduction

Anthropogenic contributions to atmospheric greenhouse gases (GHG) are due largely to the combustion of fossil fuels. Land-use activities, especially deforestation, are also a major source of GHG, accounting for ∼8–20% of all global emissions [1]. While the role of terrestrial forests as a source and sink of greenhouse gases is well known, new evidence indicates that another source of GHG is the release, via land-use conversion, of carbon (C) stored in the biomass and deep sediments of vegetated ecosystems such as tidal marshes, mangroves, and seagrass beds. These coastal carbon stocks are increasingly referred to as “blue carbon” [2], [3]. The exact amount of carbon stored by these ecosystems is still an active area of research, but the potential contribution to GHG from their loss is becoming clear. Yet these emissions are so far relatively unappreciated or even neglected in most policies relating to climate change mitigation [4]. Here, we estimate the potential magnitude and economic impact of these previously unaccounted emissions.

Carbon is stored in vegetated coastal ecosystems throughout the world (Figure 1). Seagrass beds are found from cold polar waters to the tropics. Mangroves are confined to tropical and sub-tropical areas, while tidal marshes are found in all regions, but most commonly in temperate areas. Combined, these ecosystems cover approximately 49 million hectares (Figure 1, Table 1) and provide a diverse array of ecosystem services such as fishery production, coastline protection, pollution buffering, and high rates of carbon sequestration [5].

thumbnail
Figure 1. Global distribution of seagrasses, tidal marshes, and mangroves.

Data sources: Seagrass and saltmarsh coverage data are from the United Nations Environment Programme World Conservation Monitoring Centre (UNEP-WCMC); mangrove coverage data are from UNEP-WCMC in collaboration with the International Society for Mangrove Ecosystems (ISME).

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0043542.g001

thumbnail
Table 1. Estimates of carbon released by land-use change in coastal ecosystems globally and associated economic impact.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0043542.t001

Rapid loss of vegetated coastal ecosystems through land-use change has occurred for centuries, and has accelerated in recent decades. Causes of habitat conversion vary globally and include conversion to aquaculture, agriculture, forest over-exploitation, industrial use, upstream dams, dredging, eutrophication of overlying waters, urban development, and conversion to open water due to accelerated sea-level rise and subsidence [6][12]. Estimates of cumulative loss over the last 50–100 years range from 25–50% of total global area of each type [12]. This decline continues today, with estimated losses of ∼0.5–3% annually depending on ecosystem type, amounting to ∼8000 km2 lost each year [7], [11], [13][19]. At current conversion rates, 30–40% of tidal marshes and seagrasses [20] and nearly 100% of mangroves [8] could be lost in the next 100 years.

An emerging body of literature recognizes the importance of coastal habitat loss to climate change [2], [15], [21], [22]. However this research has focused almost exclusively on the lost carbon sequestration potential (annual uptake), while the conversion of large standing carbon pools (previously sequestered and stored C) associated with vegetated coastal ecosystems has been relatively overlooked. Only in the most recent studies and reviews has the release of standing carbon pools begun to gain more attention [12], [23], [24].

Quantitative estimates of these emissions are scarce. Indications are that such ‘pulse’ releases may have the largest and most immediate impact on green house gas (GHG) emissions, possibly amounting to 50 times the annual net carbon sequestration rate [12], [25]. Similar greenhouse gas emissions from the conversion or degradation of freshwater wetlands (e.g., peatlands) are recognized by scientists and international policy-making bodies [1], [26], while blue carbon remains largely unaccounted.

Vegetated coastal ecosystems typically reside over organic-rich sediments that may be several meters deep and effectively ‘lock up’ carbon due to low-oxygen conditions and other factors that inhibit decomposition at depth [27]. These C stocks can exceed those of terrestrial ecosystems, including forests, by several times [24], [28]. When coastal habitats are degraded or converted to other land uses, the sediment carbon is destabilized or exposed to oxygen, and subsequent increased microbial activity releases large amounts of GHG to the atmosphere or water column [25], [27], [29][32]. For example, sediment C was reduced by 50% within 8 years after land clearing in a Panamanian mangrove [29]. Lovelock et al. [33] reported large short-term CO2 efflux from the sediment surface of cleared mangroves of approximately 29 Mg CO2 ha−1 yr−1. Eventually the majority of carbon in disturbed coastal ecosystems can be released to the atmosphere (in the form of CO2, CH4, or other carbon species) with the timeframe highly variable and dependent on the specific land use and nature of the sediment [23].

The potential economic impacts that come from releasing stored coastal blue carbon to the atmosphere are felt worldwide. Economic impacts of GHG emissions in general stem from associated increases in droughts, sea level, and frequency of extreme weather events [34]. Costs are believed to be borne most acutely in low-income countries. However, the potentially large carbon emissions from degraded vegetated coastal ecosystems may also offer a new carbon mitigation opportunity that is currently unrealized—similar to, or even part of, Reduced Emissions from Deforestation and Degradation (REDD+), in which economic incentives encourage the maintenance of forest ecosystem C storage [4].

Our objective here is to provide the most comprehensive estimate to date of the global carbon emissions and economic impacts of the ongoing conversion of standing carbon stocks in coastal ecosystems, including carbon emissions from sediments – the first analysis to do so. Policy makers need at least an order of magnitude estimate of the potential importance of coastal habitat change as a contributor to global GHG emissions. Although uncertainties exist in the available data underlying such estimates, there is strong need at the international level for the most up-to-date assessment; sufficient information is available to evaluate the importance of coastal blue carbon in both absolute and relative terms. Given the scientific uncertainties present, we used a parsimonious uncertainty/sensitivity framework to a) establish bookends that very likely contain the true value of global emissions from coastal ecosystem conversion, and b) identify the key data gaps relevant to moving forward with their inclusion in carbon policies.

Methods

Analytical framework

To gauge potential carbon emissions from the conversion of coastal ecosystems, we combined estimates of global area, current conversion rate (% of area lost per year), and near-surface carbon stocks susceptible to loss in each of the three habitat types (Table 1). Each of the input multipliers has varying degrees of uncertainty owing to ranges reported in the literature or limited available data. Therefore we used a Monte Carlo approach [35] to propagate uncertainties in each factor using the best available ranges from the literature (see below). Simulations comprised 50,000 iterations for each habitat type and assumed a normal distribution of input variables within reported ranges, except when ranges were heavily right skewed (i.e., a minority of extremely high estimates in the literature for a given input). In the latter case, we applied a simple gamma distribution with parameters corresponding to the minimum and maximum reported values in order to account for, but avoid undue influence of, possible high-end extremes. This distribution applied to global area estimates of tidal marsh (gamma shape 1.6, scale 6) and seagrass (shape 4, scale 4). Fifth and 95th percentiles were extracted from the 50,000 Monte Carlo iteration outputs to obtain non-parametric 90% confidence intervals for emissions in each type.

Data inputs

Global area.

Global area inputs were derived from international monitoring databases and recently published literature. For tidal marshes, we applied a central estimate of 5.1 Mha (obtained from the United Nations Environment Programme-World Conservation Monitoring Centre [UNEP-WCMC] spatial data, 2005) and a range of 2.2 to 40 Mha [12], [15], [21]. The low-end estimate may be too low, but until improved estimates are available, we took the conservative approach of including the full range of data sources. It should also be noted that, in some cases, these published estimates were derived from the same primary sources, so not all values are truly independent of each other. Of the three habitat types considered, mangroves have perhaps the best global extent data and a fairly narrow range of reported values; we applied the recently reported range of 13.8 to 15.2 Mha [12], [19], [36] and a corresponding central estimate of 14.5 Mha. For seagrasses, we applied a central estimate of 30 Mha (obtained from UNEP-WCMC spatial data, 2005) and a range of 17.7 to 60 Mha [12], [37][39].

Annual area loss.

Current rates of global annual loss (land-use conversion) were derived from recently published literature. We assigned a global annual loss rate of 1–2% for tidal marshes [12], [16], [18]; 0.7–3% for mangroves [7], [12], [14], [17], [19]; and 0.4–2.6% for seagrasses [11][13], [15], [38].

Carbon loss upon conversion.

Carbon loss per hectare converted has not been well quantified in coastal ecosystems, but likely bounds can be derived. The loss of vegetation biomass is the most common and readily apparent result of conversion, but there are also losses from the surface sediment carbon pool (<1 m deep; [29], [32]) as well as potentially large, but not well understood, C losses from deep sediments [23], [40]. We therefore took a conservative approach by focusing only on carbon in vegetation and the top meter of sediment. These pools are most susceptible to land-use change and are termed here ‘near-surface’ carbon. For the uncertainty range used in the simulations, we used the best available estimate of global mean near-surface C in each ecosystem type, with a range of possible fates of this pool upon conversion, from 25% to 100% emission to the atmosphere depending on disturbance type, possible re-burial of disturbed material, and degree of C recalcitrance. The high end of 100% would apply if most land uses tend toward extreme impacts that convert the system to a qualitatively different state that removes and prevents recovery of near-surface carbon. The low end of 25% would apply if most land uses are relatively light-handed and retain, bury, or merely redistribute most near-surface carbon. Blue carbon that is oxidized via disturbance and exposure (converted to species such as CO2, HCO3, or CO32−) increases the effective CO2 concentration of the ocean-atmosphere system. Because of the partial pressure equilibrium of CO2 between air and water, atmospheric CO2 levels are affected by either direct ocean-to-atmosphere gas exchange, or by reductions in the ability of the ocean to absorb atmospheric CO2 [41].

Mechanisms of disturbance to sediment carbon vary by ecosystem type, but often affect near-surface carbon to at least one meter depth. In tidal marshes, a primary land-use activity is the creation of arable land via diking and draining, an effect that may persist for decades and lead to the loss of several meters of sediment, along with its carbon, due to oxidation [23]. For mangroves, conversion to aquaculture is widespread, with the excavation of mangrove sediments to depths of about one meter exposing a large portion of the sediment carbon to oxygen; system degradation through over-harvest can also lead to sediment erosion and exposure [25]. In seagrass systems, water quality impairment, generally from excess nutrients or sediments from terrestrial sources, is a leading cause of ecosystem decline and loss, and ultimately exposure of sediment carbon to the water column or atmosphere [42]. Direct impacts such as dredging, trawling, and anchoring also affect seagrass beds [42].

For near-surface carbon stocks (including just the top meter of sediment), studies suggest conservative carbon storage estimates of approximately 250 Mg of carbon per hectare for tidal marshes [16], [21]; 280 Mg C ha−1 for mangroves [24], [28], [43]; and 140 Mg C ha−1 for seagrasses [44][47]. Following IPCC protocol for tracking changes in carbon stocks [48][50], and to facilitate comparison among most other assessments, we express ecosystem carbon in terms of potential CO2 emissions – obtained by multiplying C stocks by 3.67, the molecular weight ratio of CO2 to C. The values for tidal marshes, mangroves, and seagrasses therefore become 917, 1028, and 512 Mg of potential CO2 emissions per hectare, respectively. These estimates are conservative since larger amounts of carbon are often held in as much as 6 meters of sediment and biomass beneath the emergent vegetation [21], [24], [51]. The carbon in emergent living biomass of these ecosystems ranges widely, from estimated mean values of 1 to 129 Mg C ha−1 (2 to 474 Mg of potential CO2 emission ha−1) depending on habitat type [16], [24], [28], [43], [45], [52][54]. This vegetation biomass increases the near-surface carbon estimates to global means of 259, 407, and 142 Mg C ha−1 (949, 1492, and 522 Mg of potential CO2 emissions ha−1) for tidal marshes, mangroves, and seagrasses, respectively (Table 1).

For each ecosystem, we focus on the total amount of CO2 that could be released from annual rates of conversion, but we do not attempt to estimate over what course of time these releases would be made. (At the scale of the individual site, the rate of release likely follows a negative exponential curve with time—initially high and tapering in later years. The temporal dynamic of near-surface carbon pools after conversion is a significant research need, but some studies suggest it may have a half-life on the order of 5–10 years [29].) It is important to note that any assumption of the temporal period of release within a degraded site, whether 5–10 years or much longer, is inconsequential to the results of this analysis. When summed over the globe and integrated over time, as long as ecosystem conversion rates are stable or increasing over time, the total amount of carbon released annually would be greater than or equal to our estimates.

Conservative approach

We emphasize that the analysis above should be considered conservative in its estimate of emissions. First, we reduced the emphasis on high-end estimates of global area by using gamma distributions to minimize the impact of especially high estimates. Second, we did not include any potential impacts on deep sediment C (>1 m depth), in part because of limited available science. These layers often contain more C per hectare than all the near-surface carbon combined [24] and have been found to be impacted by land-use change in the few cases studied [23]. This means that even our high-end scenario of 100% C loss upon conversion is actually much less than all of the ecosystem carbon. Third, the low-end scenario of 25% C loss upon conversion effectively assumes that all land-use changes in coastal systems across the entire globe could retain 75% of all near-surface carbon (if most C in disturbed systems is merely buried or redistributed) – an extremely conservative assumption. Fourth, we did not include the loss of annual sequestration of sediment carbon that occurs due to vegetation removal or hydrological isolation that reduces new sediment inputs.

Regarding other greenhouse gases such as methane (CH4) or nitrous oxide (N2O), excluding changes in these components is likely either a neutral or conservative approach. In highly saline wetlands (>18 ppt), sediment C sequestration rates exceed CH4 emission rates in CO2-equivalent units [55], suggesting that the net effect of losing both sequestration and CH4 emissions with disturbance should be an increase in greenhouse gas emissions. In lower salinity wetlands (salinity 5–18 ppt), CH4 emissions and sequestration are approximately in balance [56], except perhaps for oligohaline systems (<5 ppt) that are a small portion of the global area we evaluated. Finally, we conservatively did not consider evidence that common disturbances, such as conversion to shrimp ponds, that cause eutrophication have been shown to stimulate CH4 emissions [27]. Eutrophication is likely to also increase N2O emissions if the system receives high nitrate loading; otherwise it is not necessary to account for changes in N2O fluxes because emissions from anaerobic sediments are negligible in the absence of nitrate loading.

Economic impact

Finally, we calculated the estimated cost to the global economy of the estimated emissions resulting from coastal ecosystem conversion. We multiplied the global emissions estimates for each type by a recent estimate of the global economic cost of new atmospheric carbon of $41 per ton of CO2 (2007 U.S. dollars) [57]. This cost is a central estimate of the “social cost of carbon” (SCC), which is defined as the marginal value of economic damages of the climate change attributable to an additional ton of CO2 in the atmosphere in 2020 (2007 dollars) [57]. The SCC estimate is an estimate of the environmental damages that can be avoided by reducing emissions, but does not necessarily equal the price that the market will pay for reducing emissions, since that market price is determined by the avoided cost of regulatory controls on carbon and not avoided damages per se [57].

Results and Discussion

CO2 emissions

We estimate that the conversion and degradation of coastal ecosystems each year may ultimately release between 0.15 and 1.02 Pg (billion tons) of CO2 to the atmosphere, with a central estimate of 0.45 Pg CO2 (Table 1). Mangroves contain the largest per-hectare carbon stocks and contribute approximately half the estimated total blue carbon emissions. Seagrasses, despite containing the lowest per-hectare carbon stocks, contribute the second most to global blue carbon emissions, due to their larger global area. Tidal marshes contain moderate to high carbon stocks, but their relatively small total area results in the lowest—although still substantial—global emissions.

To put these emissions in perspective, the central estimate of 0.45 Pg CO2 yr−1 approaches the annual fossil fuel CO2 emissions of the United Kingdom (the world's 9th ranked country by emissions), while the low estimate of 0.15 Pg is roughly equivalent to those of Venezuela (ranked 30th) and the high estimate of 1.02 Pg approaches those of Japan (ranked 5th) [20]. Comparing to other ecosystem C fluxes, the loss of vegetated coastal ecosystems may contribute an additional 3–19% above the most recent estimates of global emissions from deforestation (5.5 Pg CO2 yr−1 including freshwater peatlands) [1], or offset 12–80% of the carbon sink in the ocean's continental shelves globally (1.26 Pg CO2 yr−1) [58]. The lost annual sequestration potential of coastal ecosystems, which is considerable, would push these estimates higher [22].

Worth noting is that these estimates account only for changes in ecosystem C in situ, and do not account for possible exchanges among different ecosystems – e.g., the transfer of C from one system in another, which would effectively reduce the atmospheric emissions result. The degree to which some disturbed blue carbon is merely redistributed (e.g., exported from a disturbed mangrove to adjacent seagrass) just means that the true value of global emissions may be more toward the lower end of our uncertainty range, which assumes as much as 75% retention of near-surface carbon. While the amount of C transferred to other habitats is likely to be small compared to the C gas emissions described here, we recommend care be taken when aggregating carbon budgets across multiple habitats should they include assumptions on the transfer and deposition of carbon from one habitat to another.

Although tidal marshes, mangroves, and seagrasses occupy only a thin coastal fringe, they play a disproportionally large role in land-use carbon gas emissions. For example, compared to the highly publicized loss of tropical forests, the combined area of the three coastal ecosystems equates to only 2–6% of tropical forest area but contributes up to an additional 19% over current estimates of deforestation emissions. Disturbance of the carbon stored in the biomass and top meter of sediment in a typical hectare of mangrove could contribute as much emissions as three to five hectares of tropical forest [24], [28], [43], [48], [59]. Even a hectare of seagrass meadow, with its small living biomass, may hold as much near-surface carbon as a hectare of tropical forest [47], [48], [59].

The emissions estimates derived here are considerably higher than previous estimates of the potential greenhouse impact of coastal ecosystem loss that have only considered lost sequestration potential. Bridgham et al. [16] estimated that the destruction of mangroves and tidal marshes has resulted in reduced sequestration of 0.076 Pg CO2 per year. Pidgeon [60] estimated that 0.003 Pg CO2 per year of sequestration potential are lost due to current rates of mangrove and seagrass loss. Irving et al. [22] provided an analysis of the large sequestration potential of restoring degraded coastal ecosystems. Those studies focused on the annual new sequestration that is lost (gained) when the ecosystem is converted (restored). Our estimates focus on the loss of carbon stocks in coastal ecosystem sediments that have accumulated over hundreds to thousands of years and are lost, upon disturbance, within a period of decades [23]. These emissions (summed over all converted area and assuming a relatively constant or increasing conversion rate globally) are additional to the lost sequestration potential just referenced.

Economic impacts

Combining the uncertainty range in emissions with a central estimate for the social cost of carbon gas emissions of $41 per Mg of CO2, we estimate the current global cost of coastal ecosystem conversion to be between $6.1 and $42 billion incurred annually (Table 1). The range would be even wider if we considered the full range of SCC values from $7–81 [57]. However, even at the low end of the range there is relatively high economic value in maintaining sediment carbon beneath coastal ecosystems and out of the atmosphere. The high ongoing cost of coastal ecosystem loss also supports the conclusion of Irving et al. [22], that management efforts focused on reducing coastal habitat loss may be more beneficial than the extensive restoration efforts being conducted in many regions which have smaller carbon benefits.

Around the globe, coastal ecosystems are lost because market forces give landowners incentive to profitably convert habitat. Elsewhere, ecosystems are lost because governments have been unwilling or unable to enforce clean water regulations and other measures that would help guarantee the continued ecological sustainability of these systems. There are, however, only a few mechanisms currently in place that would pay landowners, managers, or governments to protect the carbon stored in coastal ecosystems,

The cost of coastal ecosystem protection includes the expense of creating and managing protected areas, improving water quality, and particularly the opportunity costs of foregone alternative uses (e.g., aquaculture, real estate development). These costs can be quite high in some cases; therefore strong economic incentive would be required to counteract conversion. Absent payment mechanisms for the protection of coastal carbon, the degradation and loss of coastal ecosystems will likely continue. The global economic consequences will exceed the social cost of increased greenhouse gases as the loss of the array of ecosystem services they provide, such as fishery nurseries, biodiversity support, and coastal protection have tremendous economic value in their own right [5], [8].

A global market for greenhouse gas emission reductions could help remedy this situation. Such “carbon markets” have been operating throughout the world since the adoption of the United Nation's Framework Convention on Climate Change's Kyoto Protocol, but there has been a very limited role for terrestrial carbon reductions (e.g., forests), and no role for carbon in coastal ecosystems. Recent efforts may create a global market opportunity for reduced emissions from deforestation and degradation (REDD+). Guidance on modalities relating to deforestation emissions [61] highlight the need to include significant carbon pools in forest reference emission levels and/or forest reference levels, or to otherwise provide reasons for omitting these pools. These guidelines may be applied to mangrove forests and their belowground carbon [62], providing one step toward inclusion of a major source of coastal blue carbon in such programs.

Other opportunities have been outlined to include coastal carbon management such as ecosystem conservation, restoration, and sustainable use into the UNFCCC [4], [63]. Nationally Appropriate Mitigation Actions (NAMAs) could be an opening for developing countries to reduce carbon gas emissions while increasing national capacity-building and data collection activities. The newly adopted definition of wetland drainage and rewetting under the Kyoto Protocol provides an incentive to account for anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions and removals by Annex-I Parties [64]. These represent further potential mechanisms for reducing emissions of coastal blue carbon to the atmosphere.

Remaining Uncertainties

Scientific understanding differs among the various coastal ecosystems. Based on a sensitivity analysis within the Monte Carlo simulations, the largest contributions to uncertainty in emissions stemmed from wide published ranges for global area and conversion rates. Uncertainty is relatively high for emissions estimates for tidal marsh systems largely due to limited information on spatial extent, which had the widest influence on total emissions estimates of any input variable (accounting for 30% of total uncertainty). For mangroves, global area is better quantified, but uncertainty in conversion rates is substantial and had a large influence on total emissions estimates (18%). For seagrasses, the range in conversion rate was the most important influence on total uncertainty (14%). The proportion of C lost when converted had variable influence: the range for tidal marshes contributed only 2% total uncertainty, that for seagrasses contributed 9%, and that for mangroves contributed 18%. The value is largest for mangroves because they contain the largest near-surface C stocks. However, because of the limited number of studies of whole-ecosystem blue carbon stocks in these systems, we did not apply ranges in carbon stock estimates, focusing instead on the proportion released as applied to the best available central estimates. Further studies across a broad geographic range will allow development of likely ranges of C stocks and a more complete accounting of the uncertainty in blue carbon (gas) emissions. Overall, the most important information needs relevant to moving forward with blue carbon conservation (e.g., REDD+) include better quantification of the global area of tidal marshes and seagrasses, the actual areal conversion rates of mangrove and seagrass ecosystems, and the fate of blue carbon when disturbed in all systems.

We focused on potential CO2 emissions from conversion of standing stocks (in this case, determined by areal rates of conversion) and did not address the separate effects of changes in background flux rates which have been covered in other analyses [16], [22], [57]. Lost annual C sequestration would effectively increase the emissions consequences of conversion. In the most saline systems (salinity >18), this is true even if the disturbance were to decrease emissions of CH4 [55]. In addition, common disturbances such as conversion to shrimp ponds may increase CH4 due to euthrophication [27]. Thus, we are potentially underestimating greenhouse consequences of conversion. In oligohaline tidal marshes, however, natural methane efflux is often present in undisturbed conditions and may decrease when altered [56], which diminishes the emissions consequences of conversion [65]. Although methane is a strong greenhouse gas, changes in its contribution within the context of blue carbon may be less than ∼10–15% of our estimates of increased CO2 emissions due to conversion [55], [65]. Nevertheless, further refinement of methane dynamics in response to ecosystem conversion remains a research need.

Conclusion

We currently know that coastal ecosystems contain substantial quantities of blue carbon. To our knowledge this analysis is the first to a) combine the best available estimates of global area, conversion rates, and ecosystem C stocks (not simply lost sequestration potential) to estimate blue carbon emissions on a global scale; b) use an uncertainty analysis to identify key data uncertainties relevant to moving forward with conservation of blue carbon; and c) estimate the global economic impacts of blue carbon emissions. Our analysis suggests that the greenhouse consequences of conversion of these ecosystems are larger than previously appreciated, by as much as an order of magnitude. These emissions add considerably to existing estimates of land-use carbon gas emissions such as tropical deforestation. Although these ecosystems occur as relatively thin coastal fringes, the economic impacts of $US 6–42 billion per year are borne globally.

This analysis establishes bookends and highlights the likely importance of blue carbon conversion. Information available to support these estimates, however, has high uncertainty. New research is needed to improve our estimates of how much carbon is trapped in these ecosystems, how much carbon is released into the atmosphere by their conversion, and where on the planet carbon loss is occurring most rapidly. Our analysis incorporated widely varying inputs and therefore shows that, regardless of how the science is ultimately refined, the unaccounted carbon gas emissions from coastal conversions are quite likely very high.

While more natural science research is underway, the development of policies and protocols that allow existing and emerging carbon markets to compensate stewards for conserving these ecosystems and reducing the amount of carbon gas emissions to the atmosphere could move forward. If markets and policies are in place, emerging science can translate into action for coastal blue carbon. Such policies could have a significant impact on greenhouse gas emissions, and a transformational impact on the ecosystems themselves.

Acknowledgments

All authors contributed directly to this manuscript as part of a workshop held at Duke University in October 2010 and through the contribution of data, interpretation, and writing. We thank S. Copeland for valuable insights on this topic and 2 anonymous reviewers for constructive comments.

Author Contributions

Conceived and designed the experiments: LP DCD BCM SC WAJ SS CC JWF JBK NM PM EP DH DG AB. Analyzed the data: LP DCD BCM SC WAJ CC JWF JBK NM PM. Wrote the paper: LP DCD BCM SC WAJ SS CC JWF JBK NM PM EP DH DG AB.

References

  1. 1. van der Werf GR, Morton DC, DeFries RS, Olivier JGJ, Kasibhatla PS, et al. (2009) CO2 emissions from forest loss. Nature Geoscience 2: 737–738.
  2. 2. Nellemann C, Corcoran E, Duarte CM, Valdes L, DeYoung C, et al.. (Eds) (2009). Blue Carbon. A Rapid Response Assessment. United Nations Environment Programme, GRID-Arendal website. www.grida.no. Accessed 2011 Nov 11.
  3. 3. Gordon D, Murray BC, Pendleton L, Victor B (2011) Financing Options for Blue Carbon: Opportunities and Lessons from the REDD+ Experience. Report NI R 11-11, Nicholas Institute for Environmental Policy Solutions, Duke University, Durham. Duke University website. Available at: http://nicholasinstitute.duke.edu/economics/naturalresources/financing-options-for-blue-carbon/at_download/paper. Accessed 2012 January 5.
  4. 4. Climate Focus (2011) Blue Carbon Policy Options Assessment. Washington DC.
  5. 5. Barbier EB, Hacker SD, Kennedy C, Koch EW, Stier AC, et al. (2011) The value of estuarine and coastal ecosystem services. Ecological Monographs 81: 169–193.
  6. 6. Short FT, Wyllie-Echeverria S (1996) Natural and human-induced disturbance of seagrasses. Environmental Conservation 23: 17–27.
  7. 7. Valiela I, Bowen JL, York JK (2001) Mangrove forests: One of the world's threatened major tropical environments. BioScience 51: 807.
  8. 8. Duke NC, Meynecke JO, Dittmann S, Ellison AM, Anger K, et al. (2007) A world without mangroves? Science 317: 41–42.
  9. 9. Giri C, Zhu Z, Tieszen LL, Singh A, Gillette S, et al. (2008) Mangrove forest distributions and dynamics (1975–2005) of the tsunami-affected region of Asia. Journal of Biogeography 35: 519–528.
  10. 10. Giri C, Muhlhausen J (2008) Mangrove forest distributions and dynamics in Madagascar (1975–2005). Sensors 8: 2104–2117.
  11. 11. Waycott M, Duarte CM, Carruthers TJB, Orth RJ, Dennison WC, et al. (2009) Accelerating loss of seagrasses across the globe threatens coastal ecosystems. Proceedings of the National Academy of Science USA 106: 12377–12381.
  12. 12. McLeod E, Chmura GL, Bouillon S, Salm R, Bjork M, et al. (2011) A blueprint for blue carbon: toward an improved understanding of the role of vegetated coastal habitats in sequestering CO2. Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment 9: 552–560.
  13. 13. Costanza R, d'Arge R, de Groot R, Farber S, Grasso M, et al. (1997) The value of the world's ecosystem services and natural capital. Nature 387: 253–60.
  14. 14. Alongi DM (2002) Present state and future of the world's mangrove forests. Environmental Conservation 29: 331–49.
  15. 15. Duarte CM, Middelburg J, Caraco N (2005) Major role of marine vegetation on the oceanic carbon cycle. Biogeosciences 2: 1–8.
  16. 16. Bridgham SD, Megonigal JP, Keller JK, Bliss NB, Trettin C (2006) The carbon balance of North American wetlands. Wetlands 26: 889–916.
  17. 17. Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations (2007) The World's Mangroves 1980–2005. FAO, Rome.
  18. 18. Duarte CM, Dennison WC, Orth RJW, Carruthers TJB (2008) The charisma of coastal ecosystems: Addressing the imbalance. Estuaries and Coasts 31: 233–238.
  19. 19. Spalding MD, Kainuma M, Collins L (2010) World atlas of mangroves. Earthscan, London.
  20. 20. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) (2007) Climate change 2007: Assessment Report. IPCC, Valencia.
  21. 21. Chmura GL, Anisfeld SC, Cahoon DR, Lynch JC (2003) Global carbon sequestration in tidal saline wetland sediments. Global Biogeochemical Cycles 17: 1111.
  22. 22. Irving AD, Connell SD, Russell BD (2011) Restoring coastal plants to improve global carbon storage: Reaping what we sow. PLoS ONE 6: e18311.
  23. 23. Crooks S, Herr D, Laffoley D, Tamelander J, Vandever J (2011) Regulating Climate Change Through Restoration and Management of Coastal Wetlands and Near-shore Marine Ecosystems: Mitigation Potential and Policy Opportunities. World Bank, IUCN, ESA PWA, Washington, Gland, San Francisco.
  24. 24. Donato DC, Kauffman JB, Murdiyarso D, Kurnianto S, Stidham M, et al. (2011) Mangroves among the most carbon-rich forests in the tropics. Nature Geoscience 4: 293–297.
  25. 25. Eong OJ (1993) Mangroves – a carbon source and sink. Chemosphere 27: 1097–1107.
  26. 26. Murdiyarso D, Hergoualc'h K, Verchot LV (2010) Opportunities for reducing greenhouse gas emissions in tropical peatlands. Proceeding of the National Academy of Science USA 107: 19655–19660.
  27. 27. Kristensen E, Bouillon S, Dittmar T, Marchand C (2008) Organic carbon dynamics in mangrove ecosystems. Aquatic Botany 89: 201–219.
  28. 28. Donato DC, Kauffman JB, Mackenzie RA, Ainsworth A, Pfleeger AZ (2012) Whole-island carbon stocks in the tropical Pacific: Implications for mangrove conservation and upland restoration. Journal of Environmental Management 97: 89–96.
  29. 29. Granek E, Ruttenberg BI (2008) Changes in biotic and abiotic processes following mangrove clearing. Estuarine and Coastal Shelf Science 80: 555–562.
  30. 30. Sjöling S, Mohammed SM, Lyimo TJ, Kyaruzi JJ (2005) Benthic bacterial diversity and nutrient processes in mangroves: impact of deforestation. Estuarine and Coastal Shelf Science 63: 397–406.
  31. 31. Strangmann A, Bashan Y, Giani L (2008) Methane in pristine and impaired mangrove sediments and its possible effects on establishment of mangrove seedlings. Biology and Fertility of Soils 44: 511–519.
  32. 32. Sweetman AK, Middleburg JJ, Berle AM, Bernardino AF, Schander C, et al. (2010) Impacts of exotic mangrove forests and mangrove deforestation on carbon remineralization and ecosystem functioning in marine sediments. Biogeosciences 7: 2129–2145.
  33. 33. Lovelock CE, Reuss RW, Feller IC (2011) CO2 efflux from cleared mangrove peat. PLoS ONE 6 (6) e21279.
  34. 34. Tol RSJ (2009) The Economic Effects of Climate Change,. Journal of Economic Perspectives 23: 29–51.
  35. 35. Doucet A, de Freitas N, Gordon N (2001) Sequential Monte Carlo methods in practice. Springer, New York.
  36. 36. Giri C, Ochieng E, Tieszen LL, Zhu Z, Singh A, et al. (2010) Status and distribution of mangrove forests of the world using earth observation satellite data. Global Ecology and Biogeography 20: 154–159.
  37. 37. Duarte CM, Borum J, Short FT, Walker DI (2005) Seagrass ecosystems: their global status and prospects. In: (ed. Polunin, N.V.C.) Aquatic ecosystems: trends and global prospects. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
  38. 38. Green EP, Short FT (2003) World atlas of seagrasses. California University Press, Berkeley.
  39. 39. Charpy-Roubaud C, Sournia A (1990) The comparative estimation of phytoplanktonic and microphytobenthic production in the oceans. Marine Microbial Food Webs 4: 31–57.
  40. 40. Deverel SJ, Leighton DA (2010) Historic, Recent, and Future Subsidence, Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta, California, USA. San Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science 8 (2) 1–23.
  41. 41. Drever JI (1997) The Geochemistry of Natural Waters: Surface and Groundwater Environments. Prentice Hall, New Jersey.
  42. 42. Orth RJ, Carruthers TJB, Dennison WC, Duarte CM, Fourqurean JW, et al. (2006) A global crisis for seagrass ecosystems. Bioscience 56: 987–996.
  43. 43. Kauffman JB, Heider C, Cole TG, Dwyer K, Donato DC (2011) Ecosystem carbon stocks of Micronesian mangrove forests. Wetlands 31: 343–352.
  44. 44. Mateo MA, Romero J, Perez MM, Littler DS (1997) Dynamics of millenary organic deposits resulting from the growth of the Mediterranean seagrass Posidonia oceanica. Estuarine and Coastal Shelf Science 44: 103–110.
  45. 45. Duarte CM, Chiscano CL (1999) Seagrass biomass and production: a reassessment. Aquatic Botany 65: 159–174.
  46. 46. Vichkovitten T, Holmer M (2005) Dissolved and particulate organic matter in contrasting Zostera marina (eelgrass) sediments. Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology 316: 183–201.
  47. 47. Fourqurean JW, Duarte CM, Kennedy H, Marba N, Holmer M, et al. (2012) Seagrass ecosystems as a globally significant carbon stock. Nature Geoscience 5: 505–509.
  48. 48. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) (2003) Good Practice Guidance for Land use, Land-use Change, and Forestry (Eds Penman, J. et al.). Institute for Global Environmental Strategies
  49. 49. Pearson T,Walker S, Brown S (2005) Sourcebook for land use, land-use change and forestry projects. BioCF and Winrock International website. Available at: http://www.winrock.org/ecosystems/tools.asp?BU=9086. Accessed 2010 October 10.
  50. 50. Pearson TRH, Brown SL, Birdsey RA (2007) Measurement guidelines for the sequestration of forest carbon. General Technical Report-NRS-18, USDA Forest Service, Northern Research Station.
  51. 51. Golley F, Odum HT, Wilson RF (1962) The structure and metabolism of a Puerto Rican red mangrove forest in May. Ecology 43: 9–19.
  52. 52. Morgan PA, Short FT (2002) Using functional trajectories to track constructed salt marsh development in the Great Bay Estuary, Maine/New Hampshire USA. Restoration Ecology 10: 461–473.
  53. 53. Komiyama A, Ong JE, Poungparn S (2008) Allometry, biomass, and productivity of mangrove forests: A review. Aquatic Botany 89: 128–137.
  54. 54. Yu OT, Chmura GL (2009) Sediment carbon may be maintained under grazing in a St. Lawrence Estuary Tidal Marsh. Environmental Conservation 36: 312–320.
  55. 55. Poffenbarger HJ, Needelman BA, Megonigal JP (2011) Methane emissions from tidal marshes. Wetlands 31: 831–842.
  56. 56. Krithika K, Purvaja R, Ramesh R (2008) Fluxes of methane and nitrous oxide from an Indian mangrove. Current Science 94 (2) 218–224.
  57. 57. United States Government (USG) (2010) Technical Support Document: Social Cost of Carbon for Regulatory Impact Analysis Under Executive Order 12866. United States Environmental Protection Agency website. Available at: http://www.epa.gov/otaq/climate/regulations/scc-tsd.pdf. Accessed 2011 May 8.
  58. 58. Chen CTA, Borges AV (2009) Reconciling opposing views on carbon cycling in the coastal ocean: continental shelves as sinks and near-shore ecosystems as sources of atmospheric CO2. Deep-Sea Research II 56: 578–590.
  59. 59. Pan Y, Birdsey RA, Fang J, Houghton R, Kauppi PE, et al. (2011) A large and persistent carbon sink in the world's forests. Science 333: 988–993.
  60. 60. Pidgeon E (2009) Carbon Sequestration by Coastal Marine Habitats: Important Missing Sinks. In: (eds. Laffoley, D., Grimsditch, G.) The Management of Natural Coastal Carbon Sinks. IUCN, Gland.
  61. 61. UNFCCC (United Nations Forum Convention on Climate Change (2011) Draft Decision -/CP.17 Guidance on systems for providing information on how safeguards are addressed and respected and modalities relating to forest reference emission levels and forest reference levels as referred to in decision 1/CP.16. United Forum Convention on Climate Change website. Available at: http://unfccc.int/files/meetings/durban_nov_2011/decisions/application/pdf/cop17_safeguards.pdf. Accessed 2012 January 15.
  62. 62. Alongi DM (2011) Carbon payments for mangrove conservation: ecosystem constraints and uncertainties of sequestration potential. Environmental Science and Policy 14: 462–470.
  63. 63. Herr D, Pidgeon E, Laffoley D (Eds.) (2011). Blue Carbon Policy Framework: International Blue Carbon Policy Working Group. Gland, Arlington.
  64. 64. UNFCCC (2011) Decision -/CMP.7 Land use, land-use change and forestry. United Nations Forum Convention on Climate Change website. Available at: http://unfccc.int/files/meetings/durban_nov_2011/decisions/application/pdf/awgkp_lulucf.pdf. Accessed 2012 January 15.
  65. 65. Murray BC, Pendleton L, Jenkins WA, Sifleet S (2011) Green payments for blue carbon: Economic incentives for protecting threatened coastal habitats. Report NI R 11-04, Nicholas Institute for Environmental Policy Solutions, Duke University, Durham.