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- Title
Dynamics and Controls of Methane Oxidation in the Aerobic Waters of Eastern China Marginal Seas.
- Authors
Liu, Qiao; Du, Guanxiang; Li, Xiao‐Jun; Liu, Jiarui; Meng, Ni; Li, Chun‐Yang; Liu, Xiting; Zhang, Guiling; Yang, Gui‐Peng; Joye, Samantha; Zhuang, Guang‐Chao
- Abstract
Aerobic methane oxidation (MOx) mediated by methanotrophs is a crucial mechanism in controlling methane emissions from the surface ocean to the atmosphere. Coastal waters dominate global oceanic methane emissions, but the dynamics, controls and roles of MOx remain largely unconstrained in the marginal seas around China. Here, we conducted a variety of biogeochemical analyses to investigate the controls of methane cycling and the dynamics of methanotrophic activity in the East China Sea and Yellow Sea. Methane was supersaturated in the surface seawater and the concentrations ranged from 2.8 to 19.8 nM. The distribution of methane was regulated by the sources and sinks, which were influenced largely by hydrological and biogeochemical factors. Methane was turned over rapidly with high rates (k: 5 × 10−4–0.04 d−1), indicating the enzymatic capability of methanotrophic biomass to metabolize methane. Rates of MOx varied significantly between sites (1 × 10−3–0.60 nM d−1) and relatively high MOx rates were observed in shallow waters. MOx exhibited the Michaelis‐Menten kinetics with the Vmax of 0.30 nM d−1 and a Km of 78.3 nM. Methanotrophic activity was impacted by environmental factors such as methane availability, nutrient levels, bacterial production and temperature. Nutrient addition experiments demonstrated that phosphate elevated MOx rates, while the activity was largely inhibited by ammonium probably due to competitive inhibition of the methane monooxygenase by ammonia. Comparing the depth‐integrated MOx rates with the air‐sea fluxes at selected sites showed that methane consumed through microbial oxidation accounted for up to 78.1% of the total methane loss (=sum of MOx rates and air‐sea flux), highlighting the role of MOx as a microbial filter for methane emissions. Plain Language Summary: Methane is a potent greenhouse gas and aerobic methane oxidation controls methane emission from the ocean to the atmosphere. However, methane oxidation rates are poorly described in the global ocean, and the magnitude and control of aerobic methane oxidation remains largely unconstrained in marginal seas around China. We investigated methane cycling and methanotrophic activity in the East China Sea and Yellow Sea. Methane oxidation rates showed significant variability between sites, with higher rates observed in shallow coastal waters. A variety of environmental factors such as methane availability, bacterial production, nutrient levels, and temperature affected methane oxidation. Compared to air‐sea exchange, methanotrophy represented an important methane sink and contributed up to 78.1% of the total methane loss at selected sites. These results provide a supplement to the global database of methane oxidation rates and improve our current understanding of methanotrophy in coastal systems. Key Points: Methane oxidation rates varied significantly between sites and higher rates were observed in shallow watersMethanotrophic activity could be influenced by methane availability, nutrient levels and temperatureMOx exhibited the Michaelis‐Menten kinetics with the Vmax of 0.30 nM d−1 and a Km of 78.3 nM
- Subjects
CHINA; OXIDATION of water; METHANE; TERRITORIAL waters; WATER depth; ATMOSPHERIC methane; DATABASES
- Publication
Journal of Geophysical Research. Oceans, 2024, Vol 129, Issue 3, p1
- ISSN
2169-9275
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1029/2023JC020280