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March 4, 2025

NZ hopes to store carbon in marine ecosystems—but some are so degraded they're already a source of emissions

Kina, New Zealand’s endemic sea urchin, grazes on kelp and can turn the seafloor into a source of emissions. Credit: ,
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Kina, New Zealand’s endemic sea urchin, grazes on kelp and can turn the seafloor into a source of emissions. Credit: ,

For New Zealand, a country with an underwater territory 14 times its landmass, marine ecosystems present a significant opportunity to investigate carbon storage options.

Prompted by a from the , the government recognized the need to .

In its , it highlights the potential to harness as and to count this towards the country's efforts to slow .

Several report on and mangrove, saltmarshes and . This tells us how much carbon is stored in these ecosystems—but very little about how carbon flows through them and the factors that influence whether it is stored or emitted.

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This is important. Marine ecosystems can be both sinks or sources of carbon. If we don't understand how is transformed or how (COâ‚‚) is either taken up by plants or emitted into the atmosphere, we will likely make poor decisions about nature-based solutions.

To address this, we have invited researchers from the —an innovative project linking seafloor biodiversity and climate—to bring their unique set of instrumentation to New Zealand to explore patterns in from the seafloor.

The measurements we made this summer are tracking emissions of methane and COâ‚‚ from seafloor sediments in the upper reaches of several harbours (Waitemata, Mahurangi and Whangateau) in the Auckland region.

We found COâ‚‚ concentrations were up to eight times higher than atmospheric levels in more disturbed and polluted parts of these harbours. Methane concentrations were up to 30 times higher. This shows that degraded habitats are indeed transformed into net emitters of greenhouse gases.

Paying attention to land-coast connections

There has been concern about the , at the back of the Hauraki Gulf, because the area drains a large catchment with intensive agriculture.

We found this region is a significant source of greenhouse gases.

Our sampling on the open coast revealed high draw-down of COâ‚‚ in healthy patches of kelp. But this effect was reversed in areas where New Zealand's endemic sea urchin, kina, has grazed off the kelp. These regions are known as kina barrens and they dominate many non-protected reefs.

Our data highlight an important finding relevant to how we manage and address both the biodiversity and climate crises. As we , they have in ways that store it or . The system and transforms into a net source of greenhouse gases.

We argue that we have to manage these ecosystems in an integrative fashion, considering the long-term stores of carbon and the time it takes to build them up, along with the many processes that move carbon from one part of the ecosystem to another.

Considering the dynamics of marine carbon and restoring or protecting coastal ecosystems are good options for addressing multiple challenges. We shouldn't just be looking for good places to bank carbon but also those where good management can reduce seafloor disturbance and therefore limit the release of greenhouse gases.

Considering climate and biodiversity

This project highlights the importance of considering both biodiversity and climate together. If we manage one ignorant of the other, we risk failure because .

This holistic understanding of the stock and flows of carbon (long-term sequestration and carbon in living organisms) is necessary if we are to identify viable long-term carbon stores. It is also crucial to assessing how the stresses we put on the marine environment can turn an ecosystem from a carbon sink to a source.

Working with our Scandinavian colleagues also confirmed our . For a number of years, we have been studying how different stressors—including sediment disturbance, nutrient flows from land and affect the way nitrogen, carbon and oxygen are .

These processes have implications for the release of greenhouse gases. But until now, we have not been able to test some connections and close the loop on some of our ideas.

As with most interventions to natural ecosystems, we are better off accepting they are complex, and that any supposed "silver bullet" solutions can have unintended consequences.

Provided by The Conversation

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New Zealand's marine ecosystems, covering a vast underwater territory, offer potential for carbon storage but are currently sources of emissions due to degradation. Measurements in Auckland harbors revealed COâ‚‚ and methane levels significantly higher than atmospheric levels, indicating these areas are net emitters. Healthy kelp patches absorb COâ‚‚, but this is reversed in degraded areas. Effective management of marine ecosystems requires a holistic approach, considering both biodiversity and climate impacts to prevent ecosystems from becoming greenhouse gas sources.

This summary was automatically generated using LLM.