The Arctic Ocean could be a significant contributor of methane, a powerful greenhouse gas, scientists reported on Sunday.
Researchers carried out five flights in 2009 and 2010 to measure atmospheric methane in latitudes as high as 82 degrees north.
They found concentrations of the gas close to the ocean surface, especially in areas where sea ice had cracked or broken up.
The
study, published in the journal Nature Geoscience, wonders if this is a
disturbing new
mechanism that could accelerate global warming.
"We
suggest that the surface waters of the Arctic Ocean represent a
potentially important source of methane, which could prove sensitive to
changes in sea-ice cover," it says.
If so, the Arctic Ocean would
add to several identified "positive feedbacks" in Earth's climate system
which ramp up the greenhouse effect.
One such vicious circle is the release of methane from Siberian and North American permafrost.
The
thawing soil releases methane that has been locked up for millions of
years, which adds to global warming -- which in turns frees more
methane, and so on.
But this is the first evidence that points to a methane contribution from the ocean, not the land, in Arctic latitudes.
Levels
of methane in the atmosphere are relatively low, but the gas is 20
times more effective that carbon dioxide (CO2) at trapping solar heat.
Scientists have been struggling to understand the movements of the methane curve.
There
was a rapid increase in levels due to post-World War II
industrialisation, followed by a period of relative stability in the
1990s and more recently, by another rise.
The new paper, led by
Eric Kort at the California Institute of Technology Caltech), says
measurements of methane over some parts of the ocean were comparable to
coastal eastern Siberia where there has been permafrost thaw.
Noting
that around 10 million square kilometres (3.86 million square miles) of
the Arctic Ocean are subject to summer melting of sea ice, "the
emissions rate we encountered could present a source of global
consequence," it says.
The source of the sea methane is unclear, it stresses.
The
gas is unlikely to have been belched from sediment in the continental
shelf as it was found at locations over the deep ocean. One idea is that
it comes from microbes at the ocean surface.
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