Taking stock of mangrove and seagrass blue carbon ecosystems: A perspective for future carbon trading

Seagrass and mangroves support a number of ecosystem services, such as sustaining marine fisheries, water clarity, and the protection of shoreline from erosion. Producing a national and global consensus of their total worth is a challenge. More often than not the variety and distal evaluation approa...

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Main Author: John Barry Gallagher
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Borneo Marine Research Institute 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/20106/1/BJoMSA%20Vol.1-2017-011.pdf
https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/20106/
http://jurcon.ums.edu.my/ojums/index.php/BJoMSA/article/view/994
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Institution: Universiti Malaysia Sabah
Language: English
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spelling my.ums.eprints.201062018-05-25T02:10:46Z https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/20106/ Taking stock of mangrove and seagrass blue carbon ecosystems: A perspective for future carbon trading John Barry Gallagher QH Natural history Seagrass and mangroves support a number of ecosystem services, such as sustaining marine fisheries, water clarity, and the protection of shoreline from erosion. Producing a national and global consensus of their total worth is a challenge. More often than not the variety and distal evaluation approaches do not fit comfortably within current market-based economic models, which are arguably more capable of swaying government policy in assessing their preservation over economic development. The exception to this rule is the increasing recognition of the importance of these systems as a carbon sink for combating ‘greenhouse’ gas emissions. In response, these sinks have been labelled as ‘Blue Carbon, a rhetorical tool to distinguish them from terrestrial and ocean sinks, and the different approaches they would require for conservation. However, there are a number of knowledge gaps, untested underlying assumptions, and measurement practicalities in assessing an accurate value of carbon sequestration and storage. Unless these are addressed, then the push for seagrass and mangroves to be included within the carbon-financing network may not be successful. This short communication discusses the limitations of the current blue carbon conceptual model, and provides recommendations for a more limited but robust submission of its present and future worth, required for carbon financing. Borneo Marine Research Institute 2017-12 Article PeerReviewed text en https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/20106/1/BJoMSA%20Vol.1-2017-011.pdf John Barry Gallagher (2017) Taking stock of mangrove and seagrass blue carbon ecosystems: A perspective for future carbon trading. Borneo Journal of Marine Science and Aquaculture, 1. pp. 71-74. ISSN 2600-8637 http://jurcon.ums.edu.my/ojums/index.php/BJoMSA/article/view/994
institution Universiti Malaysia Sabah
building UMS Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaysia Sabah
content_source UMS Institutional Repository
url_provider http://eprints.ums.edu.my/
language English
topic QH Natural history
spellingShingle QH Natural history
John Barry Gallagher
Taking stock of mangrove and seagrass blue carbon ecosystems: A perspective for future carbon trading
description Seagrass and mangroves support a number of ecosystem services, such as sustaining marine fisheries, water clarity, and the protection of shoreline from erosion. Producing a national and global consensus of their total worth is a challenge. More often than not the variety and distal evaluation approaches do not fit comfortably within current market-based economic models, which are arguably more capable of swaying government policy in assessing their preservation over economic development. The exception to this rule is the increasing recognition of the importance of these systems as a carbon sink for combating ‘greenhouse’ gas emissions. In response, these sinks have been labelled as ‘Blue Carbon, a rhetorical tool to distinguish them from terrestrial and ocean sinks, and the different approaches they would require for conservation. However, there are a number of knowledge gaps, untested underlying assumptions, and measurement practicalities in assessing an accurate value of carbon sequestration and storage. Unless these are addressed, then the push for seagrass and mangroves to be included within the carbon-financing network may not be successful. This short communication discusses the limitations of the current blue carbon conceptual model, and provides recommendations for a more limited but robust submission of its present and future worth, required for carbon financing.
format Article
author John Barry Gallagher
author_facet John Barry Gallagher
author_sort John Barry Gallagher
title Taking stock of mangrove and seagrass blue carbon ecosystems: A perspective for future carbon trading
title_short Taking stock of mangrove and seagrass blue carbon ecosystems: A perspective for future carbon trading
title_full Taking stock of mangrove and seagrass blue carbon ecosystems: A perspective for future carbon trading
title_fullStr Taking stock of mangrove and seagrass blue carbon ecosystems: A perspective for future carbon trading
title_full_unstemmed Taking stock of mangrove and seagrass blue carbon ecosystems: A perspective for future carbon trading
title_sort taking stock of mangrove and seagrass blue carbon ecosystems: a perspective for future carbon trading
publisher Borneo Marine Research Institute
publishDate 2017
url https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/20106/1/BJoMSA%20Vol.1-2017-011.pdf
https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/20106/
http://jurcon.ums.edu.my/ojums/index.php/BJoMSA/article/view/994
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