Note: Marco Marani can be reached for additional comment at (919) 684-2731 or marco.marani@duke.edu.

DURHAM, N.C. -- Accelerating rates of sea-level rise linked to climate change pose a major threat to coastal marshes and the vital carbon capturing they perform. But a new 91社区福利 study finds marshes may be more resilient than previously believed.

The research, published this month in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, shows that the significant boost in marsh plant productivity associated with elevated levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide will allow marshes to trap more sediment and create more organic soil.

This, in turn, will result in increased rates of accretion that will allow marshes to keep up with rising sea levels and may increase the thresholds for marsh drowning by up to 60 percent.

Coastal marshes absorb and store large amounts of carbon dioxide from Earth鈥檚 atmosphere; they help filter out pollution in coastal waters; provide habitat for wildlife; help protect coastlines from erosion and storm surge; and can store huge amounts of floodwater, reducing the threat of flooding in low-lying coastal areas.

鈥淓ssentially, we found it鈥檚 a self-rising mechanism marshes use to build themselves up,鈥 said Marco Marani, professor of ecohydrology at Duke鈥檚 Nicholas School of the Environment and Pratt School of Engineering. 鈥淎s levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide increase, more CO2 gets taken in by marsh plants. This spurs higher rates of photosynthesis and biomass production, so the plants produce more sediment-trapping growth above ground and generate more organic soil below ground.鈥

The result is that the extent of marsh loss is significantly reduced, even under high rates of sea-level rise.

The study suggests this so-called 鈥淐O2 fertilization effect鈥 may also contribute to a stabilizing feedback in the climate system as increased biomass production and organic deposition in marshes sequester larger amounts of carbon dioxide.

But there鈥檚 an important caveat.

鈥淲hile elevated atmospheric CO2 levels may offset some of the threats facing marshes from sea-level rise, another equally serious threat to marsh survival -- sediment starvation -- will remain,鈥 said Katherine M. Ratliff, a PhD student at Duke鈥檚 Nicholas School, who was lead author of the study.

鈥淪uspended sediments play a fundamental role in marsh survival,鈥 she said. 鈥淎s more dams are built and as land use and agricultural practices in coastal regions continue to rapidly change, we鈥檙e seeing a sharp drop in inorganic sediment delivery to many coastal marshes worldwide. This decrease significantly undercuts the marshes鈥 ability to build themselves up and keep pace with rising seas.鈥

The new study finds that in sediment-poor marshes, the loss of area might range between 39 percent and 61 percent, even when the offsetting CO2 fertilization effect is accounted for, as the rate of relative sea-level rise increases beyond the initial threshold for marsh drowning.

To conduct their study, the researchers used a spatial model of marsh morphodynamics into which they incorporated recently published observations from field experiments on marsh vegetation response to varying levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide.

鈥淲hile the effect of direct carbon dioxide fertilization has so far been neglected in marsh modeling, our research shows it is central in determining possible marsh survival under the foreseeable range of climatic changes,鈥 Marani said.

PhD student Anna E. Braswell co-authored the study with Ratliff and Marani.

Funding came from the National Science Foundation鈥檚 Graduate Research Fellowship Program (#DGF1 1106401), and from Duke鈥檚 Nicholas School of the Environment and Pratt School of Engineering.

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CITATION: 鈥淪patial Response of Coastal Marshes to Increased Atmospheric CO2,鈥 Katherine M. Ratliff, Anna E. Braswell, Marco Marani. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Dec. 7, 2015.

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