Abstract

Abstract. Salt marshes are important hotspots of long-term belowground carbon (C) storage, where plant biomass and allochthonous C can be preserved in the soil for thousands of years. However, C accumulation rates, as well as the sources of C, may differ depending on environmental conditions influencing plant productivity, allochthonous C deposition, and C preservation. For this study, we examined the relationship between belowground root growth, turnover, decay, above- and belowground biomass, and previously reported longer-term rates of total, labile, and refractory organic C accumulation and accretion in Spartina alterniflora-dominated marshes across two mid-Atlantic, US estuaries. Tidal range, long-term rates of mineral sedimentation, C accumulation, and accretion were higher and salinities were lower in marshes of the coastal plain estuary (Delaware Bay) than in the coastal lagoon (Barnegat Bay). We expected that the conditions promoting high rates of C accumulation would also promote high plant productivity and greater biomass. We further tested the influence of environmental conditions on belowground growth (roots + rhizomes), decomposition, and biomass of S. alterniflora. The relationship between plant biomass and C accumulation rate differed between estuaries. In the sediment-limited coastal lagoon, rates of total, labile, and refractory organic C accumulation were directly and positively related to above- and belowground biomass. Here, less flooding and a higher mineral sedimentation rate promoted greater above- and belowground biomass and, in turn, higher soil C accumulation and accretion rates. In the coastal plain estuary, the C accumulation rate was related only to aboveground biomass, which was positively related to the rate of labile C accumulation. Soil profiles indicated that live root and rhizome biomass was positively associated with labile C density for most marshes, yet high labile C densities below the live root zone and in marshes with high mineral sedimentation rates and low biomass signify the potential contribution of allochthonous C and the preservation of labile C. Overall, our findings illustrate the importance of sediment supply to marshes both for promoting positive plant-C accumulation-accretion feedbacks in geomorphic settings where mineral sediment is limiting and for promoting allochthonous inputs and preservation of labile C leading to high C accumulation and accretion rates in geomorphic settings where sediment supply is abundant.

Highlights

  • Salt marshes are among the most productive ecosystems on Earth, where over half of the annual plant biomass production can occur belowground in the form of rhizomes and roots (Valiela et al, 1976; Gallagher and Plumley, 1979; Schubauer and Hopkinson, 1984)

  • Despite the stratification of our study plots in marsh interiors dominated by short-form S. alterniflora, environmental conditions varied across marshes and estuaries

  • Our study illustrates that above- and belowground biomass dynamics in sediment-limited S. alterniflora marshes are strongly related to rates of mineral sedimentation, which promotes positive feedbacks between biomass, soil C accumulation, and accretion

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Summary

Introduction

Salt marshes are among the most productive ecosystems on Earth, where over half of the annual plant biomass production can occur belowground in the form of rhizomes and roots (Valiela et al, 1976; Gallagher and Plumley, 1979; Schubauer and Hopkinson, 1984). Accretion rates above the local organic production must be due to allochthonous sources of C and sediment (Morris et al, 2016) It is unclear whether local plant organic matter input is constant across geomorphic settings that experience a range of environmental conditions and sedimentation rates. Of the numerous studies that have separately quantified plant productivity or biomass and soil carbon accumulation rates, few have examined relationships between plant growth, decay, and biomass in concert with soil C accumulation and accretion Understanding these relationships across natural systems is extremely important as multiple abiotic conditions will determine the ability of marshes to accumulate and store C and adjust their elevation relative to sea level

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