In addition to melting icecaps and imperiled wildlife, a significant
concern among scientists is that higher Arctic temperatures brought
about by climate change could result in the release of massive amounts
of carbon locked in the region’s frozen soil in the form of carbon
dioxide and methane. Arctic permafrost is estimated to contain about a
trillion tons of carbon, which would potentially accelerate global
warming. Carbon emissions in the form of methane have been of particular
concern because on a 100-year scale methane is about 25-times more
potent than carbon dioxide at trapping heat.
However, new research led by
Princeton University researchers and published in
The ISME Journal
in August suggests that, thanks to methane-hungry bacteria, the
majority of Arctic soil might actually be able to absorb methane from
the atmosphere rather than release it. Furthermore, that ability seems
to become greater as temperatures rise.
The researchers found that
Arctic soils containing low carbon content — which make up 87 percent
of the soil in permafrost regions globally — not only remove methane
from the atmosphere, but also become more efficient as temperatures
increase. During a three-year period, a carbon-poor site on Axel Heiberg
Island in Canada’s Arctic region consistently took up more methane as
the ground temperature rose from 0 to 18 degrees Celsius (32 to 64.4
degrees Fahrenheit). The researchers project that should Arctic
temperatures rise by 5 to 15 degrees Celsius over the next 100 years,
the methane-absorbing capacity of “carbon-poor” soil could increase by
five to 30 times.
The researchers found that this ability stems
from an as-yet unknown species of bacteria in carbon-poor Arctic soil
that consume methane in the atmosphere. The bacteria are related to a
bacterial group known as Upland Soil Cluster Alpha, the dominant
methane-consuming bacteria in carbon-poor Arctic soil. The bacteria the
researchers studied remove the carbon from methane to produce methanol, a
simple alcohol the bacteria process immediately. The carbon is used for
growth or respiration, meaning that it either remains in bacterial
cells or is released as carbon dioxide.
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