http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/340200/title/Arctic_sea_emits_methane

Arctic sea emits methane
Source of climate-warming gas remains uncertain, but might be microbes
By Janet 
Raloff<http://www.sciencenews.org/view/authored/id/18/name/Janet_Raloff>
Web edition : Monday, April 23rd, 2012
[cid:[email protected]][cid:[email protected]]Text 
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Atmospheric scientist Eric Kort was flying over the Arctic Ocean three years 
ago, monitoring readouts as onboard sensors sniffed the air. Suddenly, as the 
plane dipped low over some breaks in the sea’s ice cover, those instruments 
detected the unmistakable whiff of methane, the second most important 
climate-warming gas associated with human activities.

“This was unexpected,” says Kort, of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in 
Pasadena, Calif. On four more excursions north of the Beaufort and Chukchi seas 
through April 2010 — always in winter or early spring — the plane’s sensors 
detected the same taint of methane in very-low-altitude air over broken patches 
of ice, Kort and collaborators report online April 22 in Nature Geoscience.

The prime suspects are methane-spewing bacteria that live on the surface of the 
Arctic waters. But the new data call into question microbiology’s understanding 
of these microbes, says oceanographer David Karl of the University of Hawaii in 
Honolulu. Normally, these bacteria — in the gut of animals and elsewhere — 
thrive in conditions free of oxygen. The conundrum here, Karl observes, is that 
the ocean surface is usually saturated with oxygen.

“This exciting study reminds us how little we know about microbial processes in 
the sea,” he says.

 In their new report, Kort and colleagues calculate the Arctic’s daily methane 
emissions during the flybys at about 2 milligrams per square meter. “That’s a 
pretty significant flux to come out of the ocean,” he says.

The methane signal wasn’t accompanied by a similar spike in carbon monoxide or 
other pollutants associated with either combustion or crude oil. So the gas 
didn’t appear to come from distant oil-production activities around Prudhoe Bay 
on the north coast of Alaska, the researchers conclude. Methane also rose in 
lock step with water vapor, Kort notes, “suggesting both were coming from the 
same source — the open water below.”

The big question for climate scientists, he says, is how pervasive this 
seawater flatulence is. If measured emissions reflect the Arctic’s marine 
surface for much of the year, Kort says, “this could be a pretty substantial 
methane source.”

Some studies have pointed to the melting of massive subsea deposits, known as 
gas hydrates, as possible sources of atmospheric methane. But those sources are 
too close to coastal regions to easily explain the new aerial data, Kort says. 
In contrast, his group’s findings are consistent with measurements of methane 
in water from the central Arctic made by Ellen Damm at the Alfred Wegener 
Institute in Bremerhaven, Germany, and colleagues.

For now, Damm says, there are no confirmed explanations for the mysterious 
methane releases from Arctic waters seen by Kort’s group during dark months. 
But she says those data suggest that a seasonal nutrient disruption in the 
western Arctic Ocean “exerts pressure on the microbial food web” — creating 
conditions unusually favorable for methane-exhaling bacteria.

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