4.5 Article

Dissolved methane in the water column of the Saguenay Fjord

Journal

MARINE CHEMISTRY
Volume 230, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.marchem.2021.103926

Keywords

Saguenay Fjord; Dissolved methane; Distribution; Air-sea flux; Microbial oxidation; Isotope composition

Funding

  1. NSERC Discovery Grant [2017-05135]
  2. Quebec-Ocean equipment grant
  3. China Scholarship Council
  4. Institut des sciences de la mer de Rimouski (ISMER)

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This study investigated the methane emission rates and drivers in the Saguenay Fjord in eastern Canada. It found that river runoff accounts for 81% of the total methane input to the fjord, with microbial oxidation of methane comparable to emission to the atmosphere. Deep-water renewal and river runoff play crucial roles in controlling methane dynamics and emissions in fjords.
Near-shore environments are a significant source of atmospheric methane but the size of this source is poorly constrained, particularly for fjords and fjards. This study investigated the methane emission rates and the drivers controlling the dynamics of dissolved methane in the Saguenay Fjord, a deep, stratified, and well-oxygenated subarctic fjord system in eastern Canada. Dissolved methane concentrations ([CH4]) in the water column were measured in October 2016 and June, October, and November 2017, with stable carbon isotope composition of methane (delta(CCH4)-C-13) analyzed during the November 2017 survey. Surface-water [CH4] ranged from 16 to 184 nmol L-1 and decreased with increasing salinity in a bi-segment linear manner, inferring a temporally constant marine endmember but a freshwater discharge-dependent river endmember. The multi-cruises dataset yields a mean [CH4] saturation ratio of 12.7 (range: 4.5-48.7) and a mean emission rate of 53.4 mu mol m 2 d 1 (range: 16.4-256.9 mu mol m(-2) d(-1)). [CH4] was generally higher in surface water than in deep water. However, sillinduced mixing could homogenize [CH4] near the mouth of the fjord and sedimentary input of biogenic methane (delta(CCH4)-C-13: 57.660%) in the fjord's head region increased [CH4] in the overlying bottom water up to 459 nmol L-1. The longitudinal pattern of [CH4] below the surface layer was primarily controlled by deep-water renewal events. Deep-water [CH4] declined with rising apparent oxygen utilization, suggestive of aerobic microbial methane oxidation at rates estimated to be <0.1 nmol L-1 d(-1). The delta(CCH4)-C-13 data yields a carbon isotopic fractionation factor of 1.08 in both the surface and deep waters that points to microbial oxidation dictating the carbon isotopic fractionation of methane in the fjord. Mass-balance budgeting reveals that river runoff accounts for 81% of the total methane input to the fjord (12.13 x 10(6) mol year(-1)) and that microbial oxidation of methane (4.45 x 10(6) mol year(-1)) is comparable to emission to the atmosphere (4.27 x 10(6) mol year(-1)). This study demonstrates the important roles of river runoff and deep-water renewal in controlling the dynamics of [CH4], delta(CCH4)-C-13, and methane emission to air in fjords receiving large terrestrial freshwater discharges and experiencing frequent deep-water renewals. The areal methane emission rates for deep fjords obtained by this and earlier studies are one to two orders of magnitude higher than the mean flux estimate for global coastal oceans, placing fjords and fjards as a potentially significant contributor to coastal methane emission.

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