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Ocean alkalinity destruction by anthropogenic seafloor disturbances generates a hidden CO2 emission
Nature and the biosphere
Published Science Advances 28 Mar 2025
Date (DD-MM-YYYY)
01-04-2025 to 01-04-2026
Available on-demand until 1st April 2026
Cost
Free
Education type
Article
CPD subtype
On-demand
Description
The seafloor is responsible for 40% of the alkalinity input to the ocean, thus contributing to the ocean’s capacity to sequester atmospheric CO2. Anthropogenic seafloor disturbances induced by mobile bottom-contact fishing and dredging influence this natural carbon sink, yet the human impact on the ocean’s alkalinity cycle remains poorly quantified. Model simulations show that the combined impact of mobile bottom-contact fishing (e.g., trawling) and dredging reduces natural alkalinity generation by 60 to 220 gigaequivalent year−1, which is equivalent to a reduction of the natural marine carbon sink by 2 to 8 teragrams CO2 year−1. Alkalinity destruction by anthropogenic seafloor disturbance hence generates a hidden CO2 emission, of which the impact is comparable to the estimated reduction of organic carbon burial by mobile bottom-contact fishing. Our analysis emphasizes that carbon accounting in marine systems should consider the anthropogenic impact on both the organic and inorganic carbon cycles.
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