Modeling the impediment of methane ebullition bubbles by seasonal lake ice

Microbial methane (CH 4 ) ebullition (bubbling) from anoxic lake sediments comprises a globally significant flux to the atmosphere, but ebullition bubbles in temperate and polar lakes can be trapped by winter ice cover and later released during spring thaw. This "ice-bubble storage" (IBS)...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Biogeosciences
Main Authors: S. Greene, K. M. Walter Anthony, D. Archer, A. Sepulveda-Jauregui, K. Martinez-Cruz
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2014
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-11-6791-2014
https://doaj.org/article/130987d502d748bba65953e878d298fd
Description
Summary:Microbial methane (CH 4 ) ebullition (bubbling) from anoxic lake sediments comprises a globally significant flux to the atmosphere, but ebullition bubbles in temperate and polar lakes can be trapped by winter ice cover and later released during spring thaw. This "ice-bubble storage" (IBS) constitutes a novel mode of CH 4 emission. Before bubbles are encapsulated by downward-growing ice, some of their CH 4 dissolves into the lake water, where it may be subject to oxidation. We present field characterization and a model of the annual CH 4 cycle in Goldstream Lake, a thermokarst (thaw) lake in interior Alaska. We find that summertime ebullition dominates annual CH 4 emissions to the atmosphere. Eighty percent of CH 4 in bubbles trapped by ice dissolves into the lake water column in winter, and about half of that is oxidized. The ice growth rate and the magnitude of the CH 4 ebullition flux are important controlling factors of bubble dissolution. Seven percent of annual ebullition CH 4 is trapped as IBS and later emitted as ice melts. In a future warmer climate, there will likely be less seasonal ice cover, less IBS, less CH 4 dissolution from trapped bubbles, and greater CH 4 emissions from northern lakes.