Dataset: Soil carbon stocks and long-term accretion rates in tidal marshes, tidal swamps, and former tidal wetlands in eight estuaries in the Pacific Northwest, USA
posted on 2024-10-31, 15:10authored byKatrina Poppe, Scott D. Bridgham, Christopher Janousek, Trevor Williams, Craig Cornu, Heather Perillat, John Rybczyk, Heida Diefenderfer, Amy Borde, Finn Tobias, Rachel Yonemura, Ava Wright, Laura S. Brophy, Leila Giovannoni, Jude Apple
<p dir="ltr">We provide a dataset of 70 soil cores from estuaries in the Pacific Northwest region of the US, including from least-disturbed and restored emergent tidal marshes, forested tidal swamps, and non-tidal areas in estuarine watersheds. Data include down-core profiles of one or more soil properties: dry bulk density, organic matter content (by loss-on-ignition), carbon content (by elemental analysis), <sup>210</sup>Pb activity, and <sup>137</sup>Cs activity. Cores were typically sampled to about 50 cm depth using either a gouge auger or a PVC tube. Metadata associated with each core include geographic location, elevation of the wetland surface (by RTK-GNSS survey or laser leveling), dominant plant species (near the core or at the site level), and groundwater salinity (usually from a data logger time series at a station located <50 m from the coring location). Many of these cores are from the same sites where the Pacific Northwest Blue Carbon Working Group has collected greenhouse gas flux data (DOI: 10.25573/serc.27161883). Core collection and processing was funded by the NERRS Science Collaborative and the NCCOS-ESLR program of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Data compilation was also supported by funding from the Pew Charitable Trusts.</p>
Funding
NERRS Science Collaborative: A comprehensive national program for end user informed estuarine research