SILVA, M. M. N.; MARIANO NETO, Manoel.; SILVA, Manoel Mariano Neto.; http://lattes.cnpq.br/7392613392266595; SILVA, Manoel Mariano Neto da.
Resumo:
Mangrove forests make up the coastal landscape of tropical, subtropical and temperate regions.
This ecosystem offers a wide range of services, including carbon sequestration and storage,
which, in the face of climate change and global warming, have global relevance. Therefore, the
objective was to estimate carbon stocks, in biomass and soil, in a mangrove ecosystem, from
the structural analysis of vegetation, species variability, abiotic characteristics of sediments, in
the Gramame River estuary, located on the South Coast. from the state of Paraíba, Brazil. To
this end, a literature review was carried out covering 113 scientific articles, of which 21 studied
Brazilian mangrove areas. Subsequently, carbon stocks in the biomass were measured using a
forest-phytosociology inventory. Soil carbon was measured through composite samples,
collected in the first meter of depth, and the soil properties analyzed, such as density, organic
matter, nutrients, granulometry, pH and salinity. As for the estimates by remote sensing, the
data collected in the field measurement was used and, in the sequence, the Google Earth Engine
(GEE) cloud processing platform was used to calculate the NDVI, SAVI and EVI. To define
the fit curves, linear and non-linear regressions were used. The choice of model occurred
considering the highest coefficients of determination (R²). The global stock estimated by the
literature varies between 4.19 Pg C and 6.6 Pg C, so that the average value calculated
corresponds to 5.34 Pg C, which is present in specific regions, such as Indonesia, Brazil and
Australia. The values recorded in Brazilian mangroves vary between 358.79 Mg C/ha and 1,851
Mg C/ha, so that the average stock corresponds to 709.36 Mg C/ha. Analogous to what happens
on a global scale, it can be seen that the soil concentrates greater amounts of carbon when
compared to biomass. The carbon stocks in biomass and soil, determined from field
measurements, corresponded to 44.89 ± 7.41 Mg C/ha and 813.08 ± 20.87 Mg C/ha in the
Gramame river mangrove, from so that the total stock in the ecosystem was 857.98 ± 20.57 Mg
C/ha, equivalent to 1,562.27 Gg of CO2. It was found that soil and biomass account for 94.77%
and 5.23%, respectively. When analyzing the distribution of carbon stock, considering the
variability of the species, it was noticed that Rhizophora mangle was the dominant species, a
fact that contributed to the formation of larger stocks (323 Mg C/ha – 65.41%), followed by
Laguncularia racemosa (119.33 Mg C/ha – 24.16%) and Avicennia schaueriana (51.51 Mg
C/ha – 10.43%). The total stocks estimated by remote sensing, for vegetation carbon,
corresponded to 26.66Gg C and 27.76 Gg C, for Landsat 8 and Sentinel 2B. These values are
above the field value by 16.45% and 19.78%, respectively. The differences were related to the
structural heterogeneity of the vegetation, the spatial resolution of the products and the
manipulations performed to adapt the data, especially for Sentinel 2B, given the incompatibility
between plot size and pixel dimension. This study showed that optical products from Landsat
8 and Sentinel 2B allow the successful estimation of aboveground biomass and carbon stock in
a mangrove ecosystem.