INVESTIGADORES
MARTINETTO Paulina Maria Del Rosario
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
CAN CRAB BIOTURBATION AND HERBIVORY REGULATE CARBON SEQUESTRATION AND STOCKS IN SOUTH AMERICAN SALT MARSHES?
Autor/es:
PAULINA MARTINETTO; DIANA MONTEMAYOR; JUAN ALBERTI; OSCAR IRIBARNE
Lugar:
Mar del Plata
Reunión:
Congreso; IV Congreso Internacional de Servicios Ecosistémicos en los Neotrópicos: de la investigación a la acción; 2015
Resumen:
The role of coastal vegetation for climate change mitigation has been highlighted during the past decade. In particular, the high rates of atmospheric CO2 uptake and the efficient retention of C in sediments in comparison with terrestrial ecosystems has been noted. Salt marshes in the South West Atlantic (SWA) coast are densely populated by the burrowing and herbivore crab Neohelice granu-late. Given the presence of this crab species salt marshes are subject to intense bioturbation and herbivory rates. In the present study we compile the information available regarding C sequestration and accumulation in SWA coastal salt marshes and propose a hypothetical model including the me-chanisms mediated by N. granulata that interfere the transformation paths of C in salt marshes. The compiled data suggest that mechanisms top-down regulated affect negatively C accumulation espe-cially in salt marshes dominated by Spartina alterniflora. Mechanisms mediated by bioturbation affect negatively (increasing oxygenation and thus facilitating aerobic degradation) as well as posi-tively (increasing retation of macrodetritus) the accumulation of C in sediments, being the later of greater magnitude in Spartina densiflora salt marshes.