Clumped Isotopes Link Older Carbon Substrates With Slower Rates of Methanogenesis in Northern Lakes
Abstract
The release of long‐stored carbon from thawed permafrost could fuel increased methanogenesis in northern lakes, but it remains unclear whether old carbon substrates released from permafrost are metabolized as rapidly by methanogenic microbial communities as recently produced organic carbon. Here, we apply methane (CH₄) clumped isotope (Δ₁₈) and ¹⁴C measurements to test whether rates of methanogenesis are related to carbon substrate age. Results from culture experiments indicate that Δ₁₈ values are negatively correlated with CH₄ production rate. Measurements of ebullition samples from thermokarst lakes in Alaska and glacial lakes in Sweden indicate strong negative correlations between CH₄ Δ₁₈ and the fraction modern carbon. These correlations imply that CH₄ derived from older carbon substrates is produced relatively slowly. Relative rates of methanogenesis, as inferred from Δ₁₈ values, are not positively correlated with CH₄ flux estimates, highlighting the likely importance of environmental variables other than CH₄ production rates in controlling ebullition fluxes.
Additional Information
© 2020 American Geophysical Union. Received 19 DEC 2019; Accepted 5 MAR 2020; Accepted article online 09 MAR 2020. We thank Nami Kitchen for help with Δ₁₈ analyses, Sarah Murseli for help with ¹⁴C analyses, and Nathan Dalleska for help with CH₄ concentration measurements. Victoria Orphan and Jared Leadbetter provided laboratory facilities for culture experiments. This research was partially supported by funds from the Trottier Institute for Science and Public Policy to PMJD, from Royal Dutch Shell to JME and ALS, from the Agouron Institute to MKL, from the Heising‐Simons Foundation to DA Stolper, and from Vetenskapsrådet 2013‐5562 to PC. Data supporting this article are available at https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.11831340.v1.Attached Files
Published - 2019GL086756.pdf
Supplemental Material - grl60364-sup-0001-2019gl086756-si.pdf
Supplemental Material - grl60364-sup-0002-2019gl086756-ts01.pdf
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Additional details
- Eprint ID
- 102400
- Resolver ID
- CaltechAUTHORS:20200408-093725679
- Trottier Institute for Science and Public Policy
- Royal Dutch Shell
- Agouron Institute
- Heising‐Simons Foundation
- Vetenskapsrådet
- 2013‐5562
- Created
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2020-04-08Created from EPrint's datestamp field
- Updated
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2023-06-01Created from EPrint's last_modified field
- Caltech groups
- Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences