Biogeosciences (Dec 2012)

Aerobic methanotrophy within the pelagic redox-zone of the Gotland Deep (central Baltic Sea)

  • O. Schmale,
  • M. Blumenberg,
  • K. Kießlich,
  • G. Jakobs,
  • C. Berndmeyer,
  • M. Labrenz,
  • V. Thiel,
  • G. Rehder

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-9-4969-2012
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 12
pp. 4969 – 4977

Abstract

Read online

Water column samples taken in summer 2008 from the stratified Gotland Deep (central Baltic Sea) showed a strong gradient in dissolved methane concentrations from high values in the saline deep water (max. 504 nM) to low concentrations in the less dense, brackish surface water (about 4 nM). The steep methane-gradient (between 115 and 135 m water depth) within the redox-zone, which separates the anoxic deep part from the oxygenated surface water (oxygen concentration 0–0.8 mL L<sup>−1</sup>), implies a methane consumption rate of 0.28 nM d<sup>−1</sup>. The process of microbial methane oxidation within this zone was evident by a shift of the stable carbon isotope ratio of methane between the bottom water (&delta;<sup>13</sup>C CH<sub>4</sub> = −82.4&permil; and the redox-zone (&delta;<sup>13</sup>C CH<sub>4</sub> = −38.7&permil;. Water column samples between 80 and 119 m were studied to identify the microorganisms responsible for the methane turnover in that depth interval. Notably, methane monooxygenase gene expression analyses for water depths covering the whole redox-zone demonstrated that accordant methanotrophic activity was probably due to only one phylotype of the aerobic type I methanotrophic bacteria. An imprint of these organisms on the particular organic matter was revealed by distinctive lipid biomarkers showing bacteriohopanepolyols and lipid fatty acids characteristic for aerobic type I methanotrophs (e.g., 35-aminobacteriohopane-30,31,32,33,34-pentol), corroborating their role in aerobic methane oxidation in the redox-zone of the central Baltic Sea.