Roca et al. 2025. Subtidal Seagrass and Blue Carbon Mapping at the Regional Scale: A Cloud-Native Multi-Temporal Earth Observation Approach.” *GIScience & Remote Sensing

Roca, Mar, Chengfa Benjamin Lee, Avi Putri Pertiwi, Alina Blume, Isabel Caballero, Gabriel Navarro, and Dimosthenis Traganos. 2025. “Subtidal Seagrass and Blue Carbon Mapping at the Regional Scale: A Cloud-Native Multi-Temporal Earth Observation Approach.” GIScience & Remote Sensing 62(1):2438838. doi: 10.1080/15481603.2024.2438838.

Abstract
The seagrass ecosystems are among the most important organic carbon sinks on Earth, having a key role as climate change buffers. Among all seagrasses, Posidonia oceanica , an endemic seagrass species in the Mediterranean Sea, has been observed to feature the highest carbon stock and sequestration rate among all seagrasses. We developed a satellite-based workflow to complement in situ seagrass monitoring efforts in the Balearic Islands (Western Mediterranean), reducing field expenses while covering regional spatial scales. Our synoptic tool uses Sentinel-2 A/B satellite imagery at 10 m spatial resolution to generate a multi-temporal composite (2016–2022) of the Balearic Islands’ coastal waters within the Google Earth Engine cloud computing platform, optimizing image processing and highlighting the importance of a high-resolution bathymetric dataset to increase seagrass mapping accuracies. Machine learning algorithms have been applied to perform seagrass detection, obtaining a seagrass cartography up to 30 m of depth, estimating 505.6 km2 of seagrass habitat extent. Using existing in situ soil carbon stock (Cstock) data, we estimated a mean Cstock value of 12.27 ± 2.1 million megagram (Mg) Corg, while mapping a total annual C fixation (Cfix) and C sequestration (Cseq) rates of P. oceanica of 1,116.3 Mg Corg and 227 Mg Corg, according to depth. Our methodology highlights the key role of using a large image archive to generate the multi-temporal optical composite and an optimized bathymetry dataset to better map and account blue carbon in seagrass ecosystems across depth, showing the importance to integrate this Earth Observation approach to ensure a seagrass ecosystem monitoring at regional scales. This information aims to support the development of blue carbon strategies with synoptic time- and cost-efficient seagrass monitoring in the Mediterranean Sea.