Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Methane in West Siberia terrestrial seeps: Origin, transport, and metabolic pathways of production. / Sabrekov, Aleksandr F; Terentieva, Irina E; McDermid, Gregory J et al.
In: Global change biology, Vol. 29, No. 18, 09.2023, p. 5334-5351.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Methane in West Siberia terrestrial seeps: Origin, transport, and metabolic pathways of production
AU - Sabrekov, Aleksandr F
AU - Terentieva, Irina E
AU - McDermid, Gregory J
AU - Litti, Yuriy V
AU - Prokushkin, Anatoly S
AU - Glagolev, Mikhail V
AU - Petrozhitskiy, Alexey V
AU - Kalinkin, Peter N
AU - Kuleshov, Dmitry V
AU - Parkhomchuk, Ekaterina V
N1 - FUNDING INFORMATION: Field sampling and laboratory analyses were supported by a grant of the Russian Science Foundation (project No. 19-77-10074). The logistics of the work was organized with the support of a grant from the Government of the Tyumen region within a framework of the Program of the World-Class West Siberian Interregional Scientific and Educational Center (national project “Nauka”). © 2023 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
PY - 2023/9
Y1 - 2023/9
N2 - The expansive plains of West Siberia contain globally significant carbon stocks, with Earth's most extensive peatland complex overlying the world's largest-known hydrocarbon basin. Numerous terrestrial methane seeps have recently been discovered on this landscape, located along the floodplains of the Ob and Irtysh Rivers in hotspots covering more than 2500 km2 . We articulated three hypotheses to explain the origin and migration pathways of methane within these seeps: (H1) uplift of Cretaceous-aged methane from deep petroleum reservoirs along faults and fractures, (H2) release of Oligocene-aged methane capped or trapped by degrading permafrost, and (H3) horizontal migration of Holocene-aged methane from surrounding peatlands. We tested these hypotheses using a range of geochemical tools on gas and water samples extracted from seeps, peatlands, and aquifers across the 120,000 km2 study area. Seep-gas composition, radiocarbon age, and stable isotope fingerprints favor the peatland hypothesis of seep-methane origin (H3). Organic matter in raised bogs is the primary source of seep methane, but observed variability in stable isotope composition and concentration suggest production in two divergent biogeochemical settings that support distinct metabolic pathways of methanogenesis. Comparison of these parameters in raised bogs and seeps indicates that the first is bogs, via CO2 reduction methanogenesis. The second setting is likely groundwater, where dissolved organic carbon from bogs is degraded via chemolithotrophic acetogenesis followed by acetate fermentation methanogenesis. Our findings highlight the importance of methane lateral migration in West Siberia's bog-dominated landscapes via intimate groundwater connections. The same phenomenon could occur in similar landscapes across the boreal-taiga biome, thereby making groundwater-fed rivers and springs potent methane sources.
AB - The expansive plains of West Siberia contain globally significant carbon stocks, with Earth's most extensive peatland complex overlying the world's largest-known hydrocarbon basin. Numerous terrestrial methane seeps have recently been discovered on this landscape, located along the floodplains of the Ob and Irtysh Rivers in hotspots covering more than 2500 km2 . We articulated three hypotheses to explain the origin and migration pathways of methane within these seeps: (H1) uplift of Cretaceous-aged methane from deep petroleum reservoirs along faults and fractures, (H2) release of Oligocene-aged methane capped or trapped by degrading permafrost, and (H3) horizontal migration of Holocene-aged methane from surrounding peatlands. We tested these hypotheses using a range of geochemical tools on gas and water samples extracted from seeps, peatlands, and aquifers across the 120,000 km2 study area. Seep-gas composition, radiocarbon age, and stable isotope fingerprints favor the peatland hypothesis of seep-methane origin (H3). Organic matter in raised bogs is the primary source of seep methane, but observed variability in stable isotope composition and concentration suggest production in two divergent biogeochemical settings that support distinct metabolic pathways of methanogenesis. Comparison of these parameters in raised bogs and seeps indicates that the first is bogs, via CO2 reduction methanogenesis. The second setting is likely groundwater, where dissolved organic carbon from bogs is degraded via chemolithotrophic acetogenesis followed by acetate fermentation methanogenesis. Our findings highlight the importance of methane lateral migration in West Siberia's bog-dominated landscapes via intimate groundwater connections. The same phenomenon could occur in similar landscapes across the boreal-taiga biome, thereby making groundwater-fed rivers and springs potent methane sources.
KW - groundwater methane
KW - metabolic pathways
KW - methane biogeochemistry
KW - northern peatlands
KW - stable isotopes
KW - Methane/metabolism
KW - Metabolic Networks and Pathways
KW - Siberia
KW - Hydrocarbons
KW - Isotopes
UR - https://www.scopus.com/record/display.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85164509191&origin=inward&txGid=9cd0c3a95733935cf46f5b836d58a36b
UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/56af5cb4-f186-372f-98f3-889c845bf8c3/
U2 - 10.1111/gcb.16863
DO - 10.1111/gcb.16863
M3 - Article
C2 - 37409557
VL - 29
SP - 5334
EP - 5351
JO - Global change biology
JF - Global change biology
SN - 1354-1013
IS - 18
ER -
ID: 52938607