Transcripts
Part 4: You will hear a lecturer explaining how seagrass meadows store carbon and how scientists measure carbon budgets.
LECTURER: Today we are looking at seagrass carbon budgets. Seagrass meadows are often described as blue carbon, but the key point is where carbon is stored. Most long-term carbon is held in coastal sediments, not in the leaves you see waving in the water. As plants grow, shed material, and die back, organic matter becomes buried. If the seabed stays stable, that buried carbon can remain locked away for decades.
A carbon budget is a balance sheet. We estimate carbon inputs, storage, and losses. A meadow can look healthy yet still be losing carbon if the sediment is disturbed. That is why restoration projects should not claim success just because seagrass is present.
Let us start with the main causes of carbon loss. The first is root damage. Seagrass roots and underground stems bind the seabed like stitching in fabric. When anchors drag, when boats repeatedly touch bottom, or when nearby works alter currents, those roots can be torn. Once the root mat is broken, the seabed loosens and erosion increases. Erosion matters because it resuspends fine particles and can release stored carbon that was previously buried.
A second cause is poor light. Seagrass needs light to photosynthesise, so anything that clouds the water reduces carbon capture. One common driver is boat traffic in shallow channels. Propellers, wakes, and repeated movement stir up sediment and raise turbidity, meaning the water becomes less clear. With higher turbidity, less light reaches the leaves, growth slows, and the meadow may thin out, making it even easier for waves to disturb the seabed.
A third cause is heat stress. Seagrass species have temperature limits. During marine heatwaves, warm water persists long enough to disrupt normal metabolism. Respiration can rise while photosynthesis does not keep up, so overall productivity declines. Lower productivity means less new biomass and therefore less carbon entering the system, and recovery after damage becomes slower.
How do scientists measure a carbon budget? Because storage is mostly below ground, teams often begin with sediment cores. A core is a vertical tube sample of the seabed. By analysing layers, researchers can estimate historical accumulation and check whether the most recent layers show disturbance. Cores also help compare sites, because two meadows can have similar plant cover but very different stores below.
Teams also measure plant growth directly. A common method is to attach small tags near the base of selected leaves. After a set period, the distance of new growth is measured. This provides a practical estimate of leaf production, one component of carbon input. It is not perfect, but it can be repeated across seasons and compared between meadows.
Budgets also include carbon that leaves the meadow. Not all plant material stays where it grows. Leaves break off in storms, detach as they age, and drift. Researchers estimate export by collecting drifting fragments in nets or by surveying nearby shorelines and then scaling up those observations. Export can sometimes move carbon to deeper areas where it may be buried again, but it reduces the amount remaining within the meadow’s local budget.
What helps restoration projects succeed? First, reduce physical damage. Planting seagrass is not enough if anchors keep ripping up the seabed. Marked channels, no-anchor zones, and suitable moorings can reduce damage and help stabilise sediments.
Second, be honest about uncertainty. Carbon estimates involve assumptions about sampling, variability, and timing. Good reports present budget uncertainty, not a single number that looks exact.
Finally, monitoring must be long term. A calm year can make a project look successful, while a stormy year can hide progress. Without monitoring over multiple years, teams cannot learn, adjust methods, or respond after heatwaves and storms. When you evaluate seagrass carbon claims, ask where the carbon is stored, what pressures remain, and whether there is long-term monitoring.
One more point about interpretation. People often focus on the surface canopy because it is easy to photograph, but canopy alone is a weak success measure. A few shoots can return briefly, yet the sediment store may still be eroding. Better evaluation combines measures. For example, repeated core sampling can show whether sediment carbon is stable, and tag measurements can show whether productivity is recovering. Managers also watch for signs of stabilisation, such as clearer water and reduced bare patches, because patchy beds are more vulnerable to wave action. If budgets are being used for policy, teams should document methods carefully so different projects can be compared on the same basis. Otherwise, funding may go to projects that look good temporarily.