GSTDTAP  > 气候变化
DOI10.1111/gcb.16105
The impact of mobile demersal fishing on carbon storage in seabed sediments
Graham Epstein; Jack J. Middelburg; Julie P. Hawkins; Catrin R. Norris; Callum M. Roberts
2022-02-17
发表期刊Global Change Biology
出版年2022
英文摘要

Subtidal marine sediments are one of the planet's primary carbon stores and strongly influence the oceanic sink for atmospheric CO2. By far the most widespread human activity occurring on the seabed is bottom trawling/dredging for fish and shellfish. A global first-order estimate suggested mobile demersal fishing activities may cause 0.16–0.4 Gt of organic carbon (OC) to be remineralized annually from seabed sediment carbon stores (Sala et al., 2021). There are, however, many uncertainties in this calculation. Here, we discuss the potential drivers of change in seabed sediment OC stores due to mobile demersal fishing activities and conduct a literature review, synthesizing studies where this interaction has been directly investigated. Under certain environmental settings, we hypothesize that mobile demersal fishing would reduce OC in seabed stores due to lower production of flora and fauna, the loss of fine flocculent material, increased sediment resuspension, mixing and transport and increased oxygen exposure. Reductions would be offset to varying extents by reduced faunal bioturbation and community respiration, increased off-shelf transport and increases in primary production from the resuspension of nutrients. Studies which directly investigated the impact of demersal fishing on OC stocks had mixed results. A finding of no significant effect was reported in 61% of 49 investigations; 29% reported lower OC due to fishing activities, with 10% reporting higher OC. In relation to remineralization rates within the seabed, four investigations reported that demersal fishing activities decreased remineralization, with three reporting higher remineralization rates. Patterns in the environmental and experimental characteristics between different outcomes were largely indistinct. More evidence is urgently needed to accurately quantify the impact of anthropogenic physical disturbance on seabed carbon in different environmental settings and to incorporate full evidence-based carbon considerations into global seabed management.

领域气候变化 ; 资源环境
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文献类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://119.78.100.173/C666/handle/2XK7JSWQ/346682
专题气候变化
资源环境科学
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GB/T 7714
Graham Epstein,Jack J. Middelburg,Julie P. Hawkins,et al. The impact of mobile demersal fishing on carbon storage in seabed sediments[J]. Global Change Biology,2022.
APA Graham Epstein,Jack J. Middelburg,Julie P. Hawkins,Catrin R. Norris,&Callum M. Roberts.(2022).The impact of mobile demersal fishing on carbon storage in seabed sediments.Global Change Biology.
MLA Graham Epstein,et al."The impact of mobile demersal fishing on carbon storage in seabed sediments".Global Change Biology (2022).
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