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Anaerobic methane oxidation is an important sink for methane in the ocean's largest oxygen minimum zone

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LIMNOLOGY AND OCEANOGRAPHY
卷 64, 期 6, 页码 2569-2585

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WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/lno.11235

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  1. scientific party of cruise OC1710

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We investigated methane oxidation in the oxygen minimum zone (OMZ) of the eastern tropical North Pacific (ETNP) off central Mexico. Methane concentrations in the anoxic core of the OMZ reached similar to 20 nmol L-1 at off shelf sites and 34 nmol L-1 at a shelf site. Rates of methane oxidation were determined in ship-board incubations with H-3-labeled methane at O-2 concentrations 0-75 nmol L-1. In vertical profiles at off-shelf stations, highest rates were found between the secondary nitrite maximum at similar to 130 m and the methane maximum at 300-400 m in the anoxic core. Methane oxidation was inhibited by addition of 1 mu mol L-1 oxygen, which, together with the depth distribution, indicated an anaerobic pathway. A coupling to nitrite reduction was further indicated by the inhibitory effect of the nitric oxide scavenger 2-phenyl-4,4,5,5-tetramethylimidazoline-1-oxyl-3-oxide (PTIO). Metatranscriptomes from the anoxic OMZ core supported the likely involvement of nitrite-reducing bacteria of the NC10 clade in anaerobic methane oxidation, but also indicated a potential role for nitrate-reducing euryarchaeotal methane oxidizers (ANME-2d). Gammaproteobacteria of the Methanococcales were further detected in both 16S rRNA gene amplicons and metatranscriptomes, but the role of these presumed obligately aerobic methane oxidizers in the anoxic OMZ core is unclear. Given available estimates of water residence time, the measured rates and rate constants (up to similar to 1 yr(-1)) imply that anaerobic methane oxidation is a substantial methane sink in the ETNP OMZ and hence attenuates the emission of methane from this and possibly other OMZs.

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