Methane greenhouse gas to be released from Antartica
Antarctic may host methane stores
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Ancient organic matter could be converted to methane by microbes.
Large volumes of methane - a potent
greenhouse gas - could be locked beneath the ice-covered regions of Antarctica,
according to a new study.
It says this methane could be released into the atmosphere as ice retreats,
contributing to climate warming.
The findings indicate that ancient deposits of organic matter may have been
converted to methane by microbes under the ice.
An international team reported the results in Nature journal.
Study leader Jemima Wadham, from Bristol University, said: "This is an
immense amount of organic carbon, more than ten times the size of carbon stocks
in northern permafrost regions.
"Our laboratory experiments tell us that these sub-ice environments are also
biologically active, meaning that this organic carbon is probably being
metabolised to carbon dioxide and methane gas by microbes."
They estimate that there could be hundreds of billions of tonnes of carbon
stored in methane reservoirs under the ice sheet.
The authors say that the predicted shallow depth of these methane reserves
means that they could be destabilised by climate change, and might act as a
positive feedback on global warming.
Co-author Dr Sandra Arndt, also from the University of Bristol, said: "It's
not surprising that you might expect to find significant amounts of methane
hydrate trapped beneath the ice sheet.
"Just like in sub-seafloor sediments, it is cold and pressures are high which
are important conditions for methane hydrate formation."
In their Nature paper, the authors comment that their "findings suggest that
the Antarctic Ice Sheet may be a neglected but important component of the global
methane budget".
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