One of the major climate-forced global changes has been white to blue to green; losses of sea ice extent in time and space around Arctic and West Antarctic seas has increased open water and the duration (though not magnitude) of phytoplankton blooms. Blueing of the poles has increases potential for heat absorption for positive feedback but conversely the longer phytoplankton blooms have increased carbon export to storage and sequestration by shelf benthos. However, ice shelf collapses and glacier retreat can calve more icebergs, and the increased open water allows icebergs more opportunities to scour the seabed, reducing zoobenthic blue carbon capture and storage. Here the size and variability in benthic blue carbon in mega and macrobenthos...
Carbon capture and storage by southern polar benthos is potentially the largest negative feedback on...
The flow of carbon from atmosphere to sediment fauna and sediments reduces atmospheric CO2, which in...
This is the final version. Available from Wiley via the DOI in this record. Rising atmospheric CO2 i...
Climate-forced ice losses are increasing potential for iceberg-seabed collisions, termed ice scour. ...
Diminishing prospects for environmental preservation under climate change are intensifying efforts t...
As oceans warm, reducing the extent of sea-ice and-ice shelves, increased carbon capture by phytopla...
Sea ice, including icebergs, has a complex relationship with the carbon held within animals (blue ca...
Rising atmospheric CO2 is intensifying climate change but it is also driving global and particularly...
When marine organisms eat and grow they capture and store carbon, termed blue carbon. Polar seas hav...
When marine organisms eat and grow they capture and store carbon, termed blue carbon. Polar seas hav...
The importance of cold-water blue carbon as biological carbon pumps that sequester carbon into ocean...
SummaryClimate forcing of sea-ice losses from the Arctic and West Antarctic are blueing the poles. T...
Diminishing prospects for environmental preservation under climate change are intensifying efforts t...
Seafloor biodiversity provides a key ecosystem service, as an efficient route for carbon to be remov...
Global warming is causing significant losses of marine ice around the polar regions. In Antarctica, ...
Carbon capture and storage by southern polar benthos is potentially the largest negative feedback on...
The flow of carbon from atmosphere to sediment fauna and sediments reduces atmospheric CO2, which in...
This is the final version. Available from Wiley via the DOI in this record. Rising atmospheric CO2 i...
Climate-forced ice losses are increasing potential for iceberg-seabed collisions, termed ice scour. ...
Diminishing prospects for environmental preservation under climate change are intensifying efforts t...
As oceans warm, reducing the extent of sea-ice and-ice shelves, increased carbon capture by phytopla...
Sea ice, including icebergs, has a complex relationship with the carbon held within animals (blue ca...
Rising atmospheric CO2 is intensifying climate change but it is also driving global and particularly...
When marine organisms eat and grow they capture and store carbon, termed blue carbon. Polar seas hav...
When marine organisms eat and grow they capture and store carbon, termed blue carbon. Polar seas hav...
The importance of cold-water blue carbon as biological carbon pumps that sequester carbon into ocean...
SummaryClimate forcing of sea-ice losses from the Arctic and West Antarctic are blueing the poles. T...
Diminishing prospects for environmental preservation under climate change are intensifying efforts t...
Seafloor biodiversity provides a key ecosystem service, as an efficient route for carbon to be remov...
Global warming is causing significant losses of marine ice around the polar regions. In Antarctica, ...
Carbon capture and storage by southern polar benthos is potentially the largest negative feedback on...
The flow of carbon from atmosphere to sediment fauna and sediments reduces atmospheric CO2, which in...
This is the final version. Available from Wiley via the DOI in this record. Rising atmospheric CO2 i...