The collapse of mangrove litterfall production following a climate-related forest loss in Brazil

Mar Pollut Bull. 2021 Jan:162:111910. doi: 10.1016/j.marpolbul.2020.111910. Epub 2020 Dec 15.

Abstract

Drought periods may change mangrove litterfall production through water deprivation and increasing tree evapotranspiration, but these impacts have been rarely estimated. In Brazil, an intense drought and strong winds impacted mangrove forests leading to mass tree mortality in 2016, suggesting that forest productivity also declined rapidly. Fifteen months after the initial impact, we started to monitor and quantify litterfall production in paired transects from disturbed and undisturbed mangroves. The litterfall production of the undisturbed forests (575 ± 28 Kg C ha-1 y-1) was 31- to 3-fold higher than that at the disturbed mangrove forests (18 to 169 Kg C ha-1 y-1). The strong decline in litterfall production may have implications to the export of nutrients to estuarine ecosystems. Our baseline suggests that mangrove forests are greatly vulnerable to climate impacts and that the litterfall production collapse in dead mangrove forests may impair marine ecosystem food webs.

Keywords: Climate change; Drought period; Litterfall carbon production; Southeast Brazil.

MeSH terms

  • Brazil
  • Ecosystem*
  • Forests*
  • Trees
  • Wetlands