| Literature DB >> 21738628 |
Catherine E Lovelock1, Roger W Ruess, Ilka C Feller.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: CO(2) emissions from cleared mangrove areas may be substantial, increasing the costs of continued losses of these ecosystems, particularly in mangroves that have highly organic soils. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPALEntities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21738628 PMCID: PMC3126811 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0021279
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Variation in CO2 efflux from peat soils over the time since the mangrove forest was cleared from Twin Cays Belize.
The fitted line is of the form: Log CO2 Efflux = a x exp (-b x time) where a = 0.712 and b = 0.656; R2 = 0.51. The model is significant: F1,30 = 40.4988, P<0.0001.
Estimates of CO2 efflux from modified mangrove and other habitats with peat soils.
| Habitat | Modification | CO2 efflux tonnes km−2 year−1 | Method | Reference |
| Mangrove, Belize | Cleared | 2900 | CO2 efflux | THIS STUDY |
| Mangrove, Honduras | Forest damaged by hurricane | 1500 | Inferred from peat collapse | Cahoon et al. 2003 |
| Mangrove, Australia | Shrimp pond | 1750 (220–5000) | CO2 efflux | Burford and Longmore 2001 |
| Rainforest, Indonesia | Drained for agriculture | 3200 | Inferred from peat collapse and measured as CO2 efflux | Couwenburg et al. 2010 and references therein |
| Tundra, Alaska | Thawed (vegetation intact) | 150–430 | Net CO2 exchange | Schuur et al. 2009 |
Figure 2CO2 efflux from peat soils that were cleared of forest (cleared 8 months) where peat was disturbed by cutting blocks from the soils (disturbed) and two days after the blocks of peat were cut (2 days post-disturbance).
There was a significant effect of the disturbance treatment (F2,15 = 25.37, P<0.0001) but after two days there was no significant difference in soil CO2 efflux between disturbed and undisturbed samples.