Pore water and sediment geochemistry of the Bothian Sea


Autoria(s): Egger, Matthias; Rasigraf, Olivia; Sapart, Célia-Julia; Jilbert, Tom; Jetten, Mike S M; Röckmann, Thomas; van der Veen, Carina; Bânda, Narcisa; Kartal, Boran; Ettwig, Katharina; Slomp, Caroline P
Cobertura

LATITUDE: 62.586200 * LONGITUDE: 19.968800

Data(s)

07/12/2015

Resumo

Methane is a powerful greenhouse gas and its biological conversion in marine sediments, largely controlled by anaerobic oxidation of methane (AOM), is a crucial part of the global carbon cycle. However, little is known about the role of iron oxides as an oxidant for AOM. Here we provide the first field evidence for iron-dependent AOM in brackish coastal surface sediments and show that methane produced in Bothnian Sea sediments is oxidized in distinct zones of iron- and sulfate-dependent AOM. At our study site, anthropogenic eutrophication over recent decades has led to an upward migration of the sulfate/methane transition zone in the sediment. Abundant iron oxides and high dissolved ferrous iron indicate iron reduction in the methanogenic sediments below the newly established sulfate/methane transition. Laboratory incubation studies of these sediments strongly suggest that the in situ microbial community is capable of linking methane oxidation to iron oxide reduction. Eutrophication of coastal environments may therefore create geochemical conditions favorable for iron-mediated AOM and thus increase the relevance of iron-dependent methane oxidation in the future. Besides its role in mitigating methane emissions, iron-dependent AOM strongly impacts sedimentary iron cycling and related biogeochemical processes through the reduction of large quantities of iron oxides.

Formato

application/zip, 2 datasets

Identificador

https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.855634

doi:10.1594/PANGAEA.855634

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

PANGAEA

Direitos

CC-BY-NC-ND: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported

Access constraints: unrestricted

Fonte

Supplement to: Egger, Matthias; Rasigraf, Olivia; Sapart, Célia-Julia; Jilbert, Tom; Jetten, Mike S M; Röckmann, Thomas; van der Veen, Carina; Bânda, Narcisa; Kartal, Boran; Ettwig, Katharina; Slomp, Caroline P (2015): Iron-Mediated Anaerobic Oxidation of Methane in Brackish Coastal Sediments. Environmental Science & Technology, 49(1), 277-283, doi:10.1021/es503663z

Palavras-Chave #(H2S + HS- + S2-); [SO4]2-; Acid volatile sulfides; AVS; CH4; CRS; d13C CH4; dD CH4; delta 13C, methane; delta Deuterium, methane; Depth; DEPTH, sediment/rock; detection limit: 0.075 mmol/l; Fe; Fe/Al; Fe2+; Fecarb = carbonate associated Fe, including siderite and ankerite; Femagn = Fe in recalcitrant oxides (mostly magnetite); Fe-monosulfide, FeS; Feox1 = easily reducible (amorphous) oxides, ferrihydrite and lepidocrite; Feox2 = reducible (crystalline) oxides, including goethite, hematite and akageneite; Fe tot; GEMAX; GNC_X; Gulf of Bothnia, Baltic sea; H2S; Hydrogen sulfide; Iron; Iron, total; Iron/Aluminium ratio; Iron 2+; Methane; Poros; Porosity; Pyrite, FeS2; Sulfate; Sulfur, chromium reducible; Sulfur, total; TS; US5B; vs. SMOW; vs. VPDB
Tipo

Dataset