Positive contribution of macrofaunal biodiversity to secondary production and seagrass carbon metabolism

Iván F. Rodil*, Andrew M. Lohrer, Karl M. Attard, Simon F. Thrush, Alf Norkko

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Abstract

Coastal vegetated habitats such as seagrasses are known to play a critical role in carbon cycling and the potential to mitigate climate change, as blue carbon habitats have been repeatedly highlighted. However, little information is known about the role of associated macrofauna communities on the dynamics of critical processes of seagrass carbon metabolism (e.g., respiration, turnover, and production). We conducted a field study across a spatial gradient of seagrass meadows involving variable environmental conditions and macrobenthic diversity to investigate (1) the relationship between macrofauna biodiversity and secondary production (i.e., consumer incorporation of organic matter per time unit), and (2) the role of macrofauna communities in seagrass organic carbon metabolism (i.e., respiration and primary production). We show that, although several environmental factors influence secondary production, macrofauna biodiversity controls the range of local seagrass secondary production. We demonstrate that macrofauna respiration rates were responsible for almost 40% of the overall seafloor community respiration. Macrofauna represented on average >25% of the total benthic organic C stocks, high secondary production that is likely to become available to upper trophic levels of the coastal food web. Our findings support the role of macrofauna biodiversity in maintaining productive ecosystems, implying that biodiversity loss due to ongoing environmental change yields less productive seagrass ecosystems. Therefore, the assessment of carbon dynamics in coastal habitats should include associated macrofauna biodiversity elements if we aim to obtain robust estimates of global carbon budgets required to implement management actions for the sustainable functioning of the world's coasts.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere3648
JournalEcology
Volume103
Issue number4
Number of pages13
ISSN0012-9658
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Apr 2022

Keywords

  • benthic biodiversity
  • carbon stocks and flows
  • ecosystem functioning
  • macrofauna
  • respiration rates
  • seafloor metabolism
  • seagrass
  • secondary production

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