Sources and sinks of methane in sea ice: Insights from stable isotopes
Jacques, Caroline; Sapart, Célia J.; Fripiat, François; Carnat, Gauthier; Zhou, Jiayun; Delille, Bruno; Röckmann, Thomas; van der Veen, Carina; Niemann, Helge; Haskell, Tim; Tison, Jean Louis
(2021) Elementa, volume 9, issue 1, pp. 1 - 21
(Article)
Abstract
We report on methane (CH4) stable isotope (d13C and d2H) measurements from landfast sea ice collected near Barrow (Utqiagvik, Alaska) and Cape Evans (Antarctica) over the winter-to-spring transition. These measurements provide novel insights into pathways of CH4 production and consumption in sea ice. We found substantial differences between the two
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sites. Sea ice overlying the shallow shelf of Barrow was supersaturated in CH4 with a clear microbial origin, most likely from methanogenesis in the sediments. We estimated that in situ CH4 oxidation consumed a substantial fraction of the CH4 being supplied to the sea ice, partly explaining the large range of isotopic values observed (d13C between -68.5 and -48.5 ‰ and d2H between -246 and -104 ‰). Sea ice at Cape Evans was also supersaturated in CH4 but with surprisingly high d13C values (between -46.9 and -13.0 ‰), whereas d2H values (between -313 and -113 ‰) were in the range of those observed at Barrow.These are the first measurements of CH4 isotopic composition in Antarctic sea ice. Our data set suggests a potential combination of a hydrothermal source, in the vicinity of the Mount Erebus, with aerobic CH4 formation in sea ice, although the metabolic pathway for the latter still needs to be elucidated. Our observations show that sea ice needs to be considered as an active biogeochemical interface, contributing to CH4 production and consumption, which disputes the standing paradigm that sea ice is an inert barrier passively accumulating CH4 at the ocean-atmosphere boundary.
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Keywords: Antarctic, Arctic, Consumption pathways, Methane, Production, Sea ice, Stable isotopes, Oceanography, Environmental Engineering, Ecology, Geotechnical Engineering and Engineering Geology, Geology, Atmospheric Science
ISSN: 2325-1026
Publisher: University of California Press
Note: Funding Information: This research was supported by the FRS-FNRS (contract 2.4584.09, contract 2.4517.11, PDR T.0268.16 ISOGGAP), Belgian Science Policy (project BIGSOUTH, contract SD/ CA/03A and SD/CA/05), the National Science Foundation (project OPP-0632398 [SIZONet]), the University of Alaska Fairbanks, the NCE ArcticNet and National Science and Engineering Research Council, and Antarctica New Zealand (project K131). Jiayun Zhou, Gauthier Carnat, Célia Sapart, and Bruno Delille were or still are PhD students, postdoctoral, and research associate, respectively, of the FRS-FNRS (Fonds National de la Recherche Scientifique, Belgium). Publisher Copyright: © 2021 The Author(s). This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC-BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. See http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
(Peer reviewed)