Oceanic methane biogeochemistry

被引:1249
作者
Reeburgh, William S. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calif Irvine, Dept Earth Syst Sci, Irvine, CA 92697 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1021/cr050362v
中图分类号
O6 [化学];
学科分类号
0703 ;
摘要
This review shows that thermodynamic and kinetic constraints largely prevent large-scale methanogenesis in the open ocean water column. One example of open-ocean methanogenesis involves anoxic digestive tracts and fecal pellet microenvironments; methane released during fecal pellet disaggregation results in the mixed-layer methane maximum. However, the bulk of the methane in the ocean is added by coastal runoff, seeps, hydrothermal vents, decomposing hydrates, and mud volcanoes. Since methane is present in the open ocean at nanomolar concentrations, and since the flux to the atmosphere is small, the ultimate fate of ocean methane additions must be oxidation within the ocean. As indicated in the Introduction and highlighted in Table 3, sources of methane to the ocean water column are poorly quantified. There are only a small number of direct water column methane oxidation rates, so sinks are also poorly quantified. We know that methane oxidation rates are sensitive to ambient methane concentrations, but we have no information on reaction kinetics and only one report of the effect of pressure on methane oxidation. Our perspective on methane sources and the extent of methane oxidation has been changed dramatically by new techniques involving gene probes, determination of isotopically depleted biomarkers, and recent 14C-CH4 measurements showing that methane geochemistry in anoxic basins is dominated by seeps providing fossil methane. The role of anaerobic oxidation of methane has changed from a controversial curiosity to a major sink in anoxic basins and sediments. © 2007 American Chemical Society.
引用
收藏
页码:486 / 513
页数:28
相关论文
共 360 条
[1]   HYDROGEN AS A SUBSTRATE FOR METHANOGENESIS AND SULFATE REDUCTION IN ANAEROBIC SALTMARSH SEDIMENT [J].
ABRAM, JW ;
NEDWELL, DB .
ARCHIVES OF MICROBIOLOGY, 1978, 117 (01) :93-97
[2]   SULFATE REDUCTION RATES AND LOW-MOLECULAR-WEIGHT FATTY-ACID CONCENTRATIONS IN THE WATER COLUMN AND SURFICIAL SEDIMENTS OF THE BLACK-SEA [J].
ALBERT, DB ;
TAYLOR, C ;
MARTENS, CS .
DEEP-SEA RESEARCH PART I-OCEANOGRAPHIC RESEARCH PAPERS, 1995, 42 (07) :1239-1260
[3]   CAN MICROSCALE CHEMICAL PATCHES PERSIST IN THE SEA - MICROELECTRODE STUDY OF MARINE SNOW, FECAL PELLETS [J].
ALLDREDGE, AL ;
COHEN, Y .
SCIENCE, 1987, 235 (4789) :689-691
[4]   CARBON AND HYDROGEN ISOTOPE FRACTIONATION RESULTING FROM ANAEROBIC METHANE OXIDATION [J].
Alperin, M. ;
Reeburgh, W. ;
Whiticar, M. .
GLOBAL BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLES, 1988, 2 (03) :279-288
[5]   INHIBITION EXPERIMENTS ON ANAEROBIC METHANE OXIDATION [J].
ALPERIN, MJ ;
REEBURGH, WS .
APPLIED AND ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY, 1985, 50 (04) :940-945
[6]  
ALPERIN MJ, 1988, THESIS U ALASKA FAIR
[7]  
ALPERIN MJ, UNPUB AM J SCI
[8]  
[Anonymous], 1982, DYNAMIC ENV OCEAN FL
[9]  
[Anonymous], DYNAMIC ENV OCEAN FL
[10]  
[Anonymous], 1932, Quantitative Clinical Chemistry