tered in marine sediments, as in the case of blue carbon sinks,
can be safely considered to represent a long-term marine carbon
storage. Blue carbon sinks, which cover less than 0.2% of the sea-
floor, contribute about 50% (71% using maximum estimates, see
Table 1) of the total burial of organic carbon in ocean sediments
and therefore rank amongst the most intense carbon sinks in
the biosphere (Duarte et al., 2005a). Yet coastal vegetated habitats
have been neglected from accounts of the global carbon cycle and
global inventories of natural carbon sinks.
Blue carbon sinks are built by plants and trees (otherwise
known as angiosperms such as mangroves, salt-marsh plants
and seagrasses) but the coastal ocean also contains vast areas
covered by algal beds. Most macroalgal beds (including kelp
forests) do not bury carbon, as they grow on rocky substrates
where burial is impossible.
UNCERTAINTY AND UPPER ESTIMATES OF
CARBON SINK BY BLUE CARBON SINKS
There is uncertainty about these global rates, due to uncertain-
ties in their areal extent as well as variability in carbon burial
rates among individual ecosystems, although independent
estimates for some ecosystems, such as mangrove forests,
agree remarkably well (Bouillon et al., 2008). For instance, es-
timates of the area covered by mangroves, probably the best
constrained amongst vegetated coastal habitats, ranges from
0.11 to 0.24 million sq km (Bouillon et al., 2008). Estimates
of the area covered by seagrass meadows, the least constraint
estimate, range from a documented area of 0.12 million sq km
(Green and Short, 2003), to an upper estimate of 0.6 million
sq km (Duarte and Chiscano, 1999) as the South East Asian
archipelagos, such as Indonesia, are likely to hold vast, un-
charted seagrass meadows (Duarte et al., 2009). Indeed, the
coastal area with sufficient submarine irradiance as to support
seagrass meadows has been estimated at 5.2 million sq km
(Gattuso et al., 2006). Hence, a thorough inventory of blue
carbon sinks may well yield a cover twice as large as the mean
area considered in current, conservative global assessments
(Table 1). Individual blue carbon sink ecosystems also vary
greatly in their capacity to bury carbon, with the maximum
reported rate corresponding to 17.2 t C year
–1
in a salt marsh
(Table 1). The maximum carbon burial rates for any one habi-
tat type are 3 to 10 times higher than the global mean value
for these ecosystems (Table 1), providing evidence of the very
36
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