Percorrer por autor "Queirós, Ana M."
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- Carbon export from seaweed forests to deep ocean sinksPublication . Karen Filbee-Dexter; Pessarrodona, Albert; Pedersen, Morten F.; Wernberg, Thomas; Duarte, Carlos M.; Assis, Jorge; Bekkby, Trine; Burrows, Michael T.; Carlson, Daniel F.; Gattuso, Jean-Pierre; Gundersen, Hege; Hancke, Kasper; Krumhansl, Kira A.; Kuwae, Tomohiro; Middelburg, Jack J.; Moore, Pippa J.; Queirós, Ana M.; Smale, Dan A.; Sousa-Pinto, Isabel; Suzuki, Nobuhiro; Krause-Jensen, DorteThe coastal ocean represents an important global carbon sink and is a focus for interventions to mitigate climate change and meet the Paris Agreement targets while supporting biodiversity and other ecosystem functions. However, the fate of the flux of carbon exported from seaweed forests—the world’s largest coastal vegetated ecosystem—is a key unknown in marine carbon budgets. Here we provide national and global estimates for seaweed-derived particulate carbon export below 200 m depth, which totalled 3–4% of the ocean carbon sink capacity. We characterized export using models of seaweed forest extent, production and decomposition, as well as shelf–open ocean water exchange. On average, 15% of seaweed production is estimated to be exported across the continental shelf, which equates to 56 TgC yr−1 (range: 10–170 TgC yr−1). Using modelled sequestration timescales below 200 m depth, we estimated that each year, 4–44 Tg seaweed-derived carbon could be sequestered for 100 years. Determining the full extent of seaweed carbon sequestration remains challenging, but critical to guide efforts to conserve seaweed forests, which are in decline globally. Our estimate does not include shelf burial and dissolved and refractory carbon pathways; still it highlights a relevant potential contribution of seaweed to natural carbon sinks.
- Past and future grand challenges in marine ecosystem ecologyPublication . Borja, Angel; Andersen, Jesper H.; Arvanitidis, Christos D.; Basset, Alberto; Buhl-Mortensen, Lene; Carvalho, Susana; Dafforn, Katherine A.; Devlin, Michelle J.; Escobar-Briones, Elva G.; Grenz, Christian; Harder, Tilmann; Katsanevakis, Stelios; Liu, Dongyan; Metaxas, Anna; Morán, Xosé Anxelu G.; Newton, Alice; Piroddi, Chiara; Pochon, Xavier; Queirós, Ana M.; Snelgrove, Paul V. R.; Solidoro, Cosimo; St. John, Michael A.; Teixeira, HelianaFrontiers in Marine Science launched the Marine Ecosystems Ecology (FMARS-MEE) section in 2014, with a paper that identified eight grand challenges for the discipline (Borja, 2014). Since then, this section has published a total of 370 papers, including 336 addressing aspects of those challenges. As editors of the journal, with a wide range of marine ecology expertise, we felt it was timely to evaluate research advances related to those challenges; and to update the scope of the section to reflect the grand challenges we envision for the next 10 years. This output will match with the United Nations (UN) Decade on Oceans Science for Sustainable Development (DOSSD; Claudet et al., 2020), UN Decade of Ecosystems Restoration (DER; Young and Schwartz, 2019), and the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs; Visbeck et al., 2014).
