Martin Dahl
Stockholm University
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Featured researches published by Martin Dahl.
PLOS ONE | 2016
Martin Dahl; Diana Deyanova; Silvia Gütschow; Maria E. Asplund; Liberatus D. Lyimo; Ventzislav Karamfilov; Rui Santos; Mats Björk; Martin Gullström
Seagrass ecosystems are important natural carbon sinks but their efficiency varies greatly depending on species composition and environmental conditions. What causes this variation is not fully known and could have important implications for management and protection of the seagrass habitat to continue to act as a natural carbon sink. Here, we assessed sedimentary organic carbon in Zostera marina meadows (and adjacent unvegetated sediment) in four distinct areas of Europe (Gullmar Fjord on the Swedish Skagerrak coast, Askö in the Baltic Sea, Sozopol in the Black Sea and Ria Formosa in southern Portugal) down to ~35 cm depth. We also tested how sedimentary organic carbon in Z. marina meadows relates to different sediment characteristics, a range of seagrass-associated variables and water depth. The seagrass carbon storage varied greatly among areas, with an average organic carbon content ranging from 2.79 ± 0.50% in the Gullmar Fjord to 0.17 ± 0.02% in the area of Sozopol. We found that a high proportion of fine grain size, high porosity and low density of the sediment is strongly related to high carbon content in Z. marina sediment. We suggest that sediment properties should be included as an important factor when evaluating high priority areas in management of Z. marina generated carbon sinks.
Ecosystems | 2018
Martin Gullström; Liberatus D. Lyimo; Martin Dahl; Göran Samuelsson; Maria Eggertsen; Elisabeth Anderberg; Lina M. Rasmusson; Hans W. Linderholm; Anders Knudby; Salomão Bandeira; Lina Mtwana Nordlund; Mats Björk
Globally, seagrass ecosystems are considered major blue carbon sinks and thus indirect contributors to climate change mitigation. Quantitative estimates and multi-scale appraisals of sources that underlie long-term storage of sedimentary carbon are vital for understanding coastal carbon dynamics. Across a tropical–subtropical coastal continuum in the Western Indian Ocean, we estimated organic (Corg) and inorganic (Ccarb) carbon stocks in seagrass sediment. Quantified levels and variability of the two carbon stocks were evaluated with regard to the relative importance of environmental attributes in terms of plant–sediment properties and landscape configuration. The explored seagrass habitats encompassed low to moderate levels of sedimentary Corg (ranging from 0.20 to 1.44% on average depending on species- and site-specific variability) but higher than unvegetated areas (ranging from 0.09 to 0.33% depending on site-specific variability), suggesting that some of the seagrass areas (at tropical Zanzibar in particular) are potentially important as carbon sinks. The amount of sedimentary inorganic carbon as carbonate (Ccarb) clearly corresponded to Corg levels, and as carbonates may represent a carbon source, this could diminish the strength of seagrass sediments as carbon sinks in the region. Partial least squares modelling indicated that variations in sedimentary Corg and Ccarb stocks in seagrass habitats were primarily predicted by sediment density (indicating a negative relationship with the content of carbon stocks) and landscape configuration (indicating a positive effect of seagrass meadow area, relative to the area of other major coastal habitats, on carbon stocks), while seagrass structural complexity also contributed, though to a lesser extent, to model performance. The findings suggest that accurate carbon sink assessments require an understanding of plant–sediment processes as well as better knowledge of how sedimentary carbon dynamics are driven by cross-habitat links and sink–source relationships in a scale-dependent landscape context, which should be a priority for carbon sink conservation.
PLOS ONE | 2017
Diana Deyanova; Martin Gullström; Liberatus D. Lyimo; Martin Dahl; Mariam I. Hamisi; Matern Mtolera; Mats Björk
Coastal vegetative habitats are known to be highly productive environments with a high ability to capture and store carbon. During disturbance this important function could be compromised as plant photosynthetic capacity, biomass, and/or growth are reduced. To evaluate effects of disturbance on CO2 capture in plants we performed a five-month manipulative experiment in a tropical seagrass (Thalassia hemprichii) meadow exposed to two intensity levels of shading and simulated grazing. We assessed CO2 capture potential (as net CO2 fixation) using areal productivity calculated from continuous measurements of diel photosynthetic rates, and estimates of plant morphology, biomass and productivity/respiration (P/R) ratios (from the literature). To better understand the plant capacity to coping with level of disturbance we also measured plant growth and resource allocation. We observed substantial reductions in seagrass areal productivity, biomass, and leaf area that together resulted in a negative daily carbon balance in the two shading treatments as well as in the high-intensity simulated grazing treatment. Additionally, based on the concentrations of soluble carbohydrates and starch in the rhizomes, we found that the main reserve sources for plant growth were reduced in all treatments except for the low-intensity simulated grazing treatment. If permanent, these combined adverse effects will reduce the plants’ resilience and capacity to recover after disturbance. This might in turn have long-lasting and devastating effects on important ecosystem functions, including the carbon sequestration capacity of the seagrass system.
Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2017
Liberatus D. Lyimo; Martin Gullström; Thomas J. Lyimo; Diana Deyanova; Martin Dahl; Mariam I. Hamisi; Mats Björk
Though seagrass meadows are among the most productive habitats in the world, contributing substantially to long-term carbon storage, studies of the effects of critical disturbances on the fate of carbon sequestered in the sediment and biomass of these meadows are scarce. In a manipulative in situ experiment, we studied the effects of successive loss of seagrass biomass as a result of shading and simulated grazing at two intensity levels on sulphide (H2S) content and methane (CH4) emission in a tropical seagrass meadow in Zanzibar (Tanzania). In all disturbed treatments, we found a several-fold increase in both the sulphide concentration of the sediment pore-water and the methane emissions from the sediment surface (except for CH4 emissions in the low-shading treatment). This could be due to the ongoing degradation of belowground biomass shed by the seagrass plants, supporting the production of both sulphate-reducing bacteria and methanogens, possibly exacerbated by the loss of downwards oxygen transport via seagrass plants. The worldwide rapid loss of seagrass areas due to anthropogenic activities may therefore have significant effects on carbon sink-source relationships within coastal seas.
Journal of Ecology | 2016
Martin Dahl; Diana Deyanova; Liberatus D. Lyimo; Johan Näslund; Göran Samuelsson; Matern Mtolera; Mats Björk; Martin Gullström
Limnology and Oceanography | 2018
Martin Dahl; Eduardo Infantes; Rosanna Clevesjö; Hans W. Linderholm; Mats Björk; Martin Gullström
Global Biogeochemical Cycles | 2018
Maria Emilia Röhr; Marianne Holmer; Julia K. Baum; Mats Björk; Diana Chin; Lia Chalifour; Stéphanie Cimon; Mathieu Cusson; Martin Dahl; Diana Deyanova; J. Emmet Duffy; Johan S. Eklöf; Julie K. Geyer; John N. Griffin; Martin Gullström; Clara M. Hereu; Masakazu Hori; Kevin A. Hovel; A. Randall Hughes; Pablo Jorgensen; Stephanie Kiriakopolos; Per-Olav Moksnes; Masahiro Nakaoka; Mary I. O'Connor; Bradley J. Peterson; Katrin Reiss; Pamela L. Reynolds; Francesca Rossi; Jennifer L. Ruesink; Rui Santos
Archive | 2016
Liberatus D. Lyimo; Martin Gullström; Thomas J. Lyimo; Diana Deyanova; Martin Dahl; Mariam Hamis; Mats Björk
Archive | 2016
Diana Deyanova; Martin Gullström; Liberatus D. Lyimo; Martin Dahl; Mariam Hamis; Marten Sp Mtolera; Mats Björk
Archive | 2016
Martin Dahl; Diana Deyanova; Silvia Gütschow; Maria E. Asplund; Liberatus D. Lyimo; Ventzislav Karamfilov; Rui Santos; Mats Björk; Martin Gullström