Coupled CH4 production and oxidation support CO2 supersaturation in a tropical flood pulse lake (Tonle Sap Lake, Cambodia)

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Abstract

Carbon dioxide (CO2) supersaturation in lakes and rivers worldwide is commonly attributed to terrestrial-aquatic transfers of organic and inorganic carbon (C) and subsequent, in situ aerobic respiration. Methane (CH4) production and oxidation also contribute CO2 to freshwaters, yet this remains largely unquantified. Flood pulse lakes and rivers in the tropics are hypothesized to receive large inputs of dissolved CO2 and CH4 from floodplains characterized by hypoxia and reducing conditions. We measured stable C isotopes of CO2 and CH4, aerobic respiration, and CH4 production and oxidation during two flood stages in Tonle Sap Lake (Cambodia) to determine whether dissolved CO2 in this tropical flood pulse ecosystem has a methanogenic origin. Mean CO2 supersaturation of 11,000 ± 9,000 latm could not be explained by aerobic respiration alone. 13C depletion of dissolved CO2 relative to other sources of organic and inorganic C, together with corresponding 13C enrichment of CH4, suggested extensive CH4 oxidation. A stable isotope-mixing model shows that the oxidation of 13C depleted CH4 to CO2 contributes between 47 and 67% of dissolved CO2 in Tonle Sap Lake. 13C depletion of dissolved CO2 was correlated to independently measured rates of CH4 production and oxidation within the water column and underlying lake sediments. However, mass balance indicates that most of this CH4 production and oxidation occurs elsewhere, within inundated soils and other floodplain habitats. Seasonal inundation of floodplains is a common feature of tropical freshwaters, where high reported CO2 supersaturation and atmospheric emissions may be explained in part by coupled CH4 production and oxidation.

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Miller, B. L., Holtgrieve, G. W., Arias, M. E., Uy, S., & Chheng, P. (2022). Coupled CH4 production and oxidation support CO2 supersaturation in a tropical flood pulse lake (Tonle Sap Lake, Cambodia). Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 119(8). https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2107667119

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