Gabriel Barathieu, Wikimedia Commons
24 Oct 2018 Récit Climate Action

Business unusual: How “fish carbon” stabilizes our climate

Gabriel Barathieu, Wikimedia Commons

A new concept, “fish carbon”, recognizes the potential of marine life to address the climate change challenge and prevent global biodiversity loss.

Oceans, and all marine life that lives under and above the water, play a central role in stabilizing the Earth’s climate. They provide a vital source of food to a vast number of land and water species and regulate the amount of CO2 that stays in the atmosphere by absorbing 30 per cent of global emissions.

“Fish carbon” is a term used to describe the carbon interactions of all marine vertebrates that contribute to the oceans’ carbon sequestration: turtles, sea birds, mammals such as whales and dolphins, and fish such as sharks, tuna and sardines. These interactions or mechanisms are the natural life processes of marine life that enable capture of atmospheric carbon, allow carbon storage in benign form deep in the ocean, and provide a potential buffer against ocean acidification.

Learn about the fish carbon mechanisms in this 4 and a half-minute video

“The fish carbon concept is not without precedence in conservation policy,” says Steven Lutz, Blue Carbon Programme Leader for UN Environment/GRID-Arendal. “Just last month in support of sustainable whale management, 41 nations of the International Whaling Commission endorsed two resolutions recognizing the value of whales in carbon storage and their potential role in climate change mitigation.”

Recent science has revealed that the natural, biological processes of whales can help trap carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and reduce climate change. These processes are commonly referred to as “whale carbon” and they can take different forms.

Whales eat a lot and they excrete enormous quantities of nutrients that help phytoplankton grow. When whales swim from ocean depths to the surface, they also increase nutrient availability for phytoplankton. Like plants on land, phytoplankton absorb carbon dioxide. More phytoplankton means more carbon dioxide removed from the atmosphere.

 

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Launch of the Fish Carbon Video and Oceanic Blue Carbon Story Map at the Eye on Earth Summit in Dubai, UAE. Credit: Steven Lutz, GRID-Arendal

Whales are also big and long-lived. This means they store a lot of carbon in their bodies, and for long periods of time. When they die and sink to the ocean floor, they bring all of that trapped carbon with them where it can remain buried for millennia.

“Whales feed deep in the ocean and return to the surface to breath, digest, and, well… poo,” said Heidi Pearson, a marine biology professor at the University of Alaska Southeast and Fulbright Scholar at UN Environment/GRID-Arendal.

“The buoyant fecal plumes produced by whales are rich in the nutrients that phytoplankton need to grow and thus, importantly, absorb carbon dioxide in surface waters, allowing for more carbon to be naturally drawn into the oceans from the atmosphere.”

Much work remains to measure the value of whale carbon and harnessing it for climate change action. However, the majority of countries that have endorsed the International Whaling Commission resolutions clearly indicate that there is great potential interest in the role that whales and other marine life can play in combating climate change.

“Recognizing the role marine life may play in mitigating climate change may help small island developing states, especially those who are large ocean nations, include ocean actions in their Nationally Determined Contributions under the Paris Agreement,” says Ronald Jumeau, Permanent Representative to the United Nations and Ambassador for Climate Change for the Republic of Seychelles.

“Seychelles believes that the sustainable management of life in our ocean is critically important in our fight against climate change. Given the dire warnings from the recent Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report, can we afford not to explore this option.”

One of the International Whaling Commission resolutions encourages member states “to integrate the value of cetaceans’ ecological roles into local, regional, and global organizations on biodiversity and environment, including climate change.”

Link to blue forests

Coastal and marine ecosystems, including mangrove forests, seagrass meadows and saltwater marshes, support livelihoods and wellbeing across the globe. These “blue forests” are vital for coastal and island communities through the many services they provide, such as shoreline protection, providing essential habitat for fisheries and supporting marine biodiversity. They are also significant for our global climate by storing and sequestering atmospheric carbon, giving them additional value and significance in the global climate challenge.

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Fish carbon mechanisms may one day be used to support sustainable fisheries management. Credit: Catlin Seaview Survey

The Global Environment Facility (GEF) International Waters focal area is enabling the Blue Forests Project to provide the first global-scale assessment of the values associated with coastal carbon and ecosystem services, to achieve improved ecosystem management through recognition of these values. The project also improves knowledge for informed decision-making, raises awareness and fosters cooperation among all stakeholders. Upon completion, the project will provide experience and tools for greater global application.

The fish carbon concept has been recently profiled through an innovative Fish Carbon Video and Oceanic Blue Carbon Story Map, launched at the Eye on Earth Summit, held in Dubai over 22-24 September. “Through partner co-finance, from Blue Climate Solutions, a project of The Ocean Foundation, and GRID-Arendal, the Blue Forests Project is helping to explore the value of carbon beyond the coasts,” says Lutz.

“This work contributes to the outcomes of the Blue Forests Project and our Blue Forests Joint Strategy with UN Environment. Given that over 50 countries already recognize coastal ecosystems in nature-based climate change adaptation and mitigation actions in their Nationally Determined Contributions, this work reveals the exiting potential to include the sustainable management of fisheries and charismatic megafauna in such actions,” he says.

Marine ecosystems expert Gabriel Grimsditch adds: “The work on fish carbon enhances our knowledge of carbon fluxes in the ocean, and the role that megafauna can play in the global climate. The video introduces the concept and the story map illustrates the science behind fish carbon mechanisms.”

GRID-Arendal is a Norwegian foundation committed to supporting environmentally sustainable development by working with UN Environment and other partners, and through a mission of creating environmental knowledge that encourages positive change.

For further information please contact Steven Lutz Steven.Lutz[at]grida.no