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Title: [Microbiological and biogeochemical processes in a pockmark of the Gdansk depression, Baltic Sea]. Author: Pimenov NV, Ul'ianova MO, Kanapatski TA, Sivkov VV, Ivanov MV. Journal: Mikrobiologiia; 2008; 77(5):651-9. PubMed ID: 19004347. Abstract: Comprehensive microbiological and biogeochemical investigation of a pockmark within one of the sites of gas-saturated sediments in the Gdansk depression, Baltic Sea was carried out during the 87th voyage of the Professor Shtokman research vessel. Methane content in the near-bottom water and in the underlying sediments indicates stable methane flow from the sediment into the water. In the 10-m water layer above the pockmark, apart from methane anomalies, elevated numbers of microorganisms and enhanced rates of dark CO2 fixation (up to 1.15 micromol C/(1 day)) and methane oxidation (up to 2.14 nmol CH4/(1 day)) were revealed. Lightened isotopic composition of suspended organic matter also indicates high activity of the near-bottom microbial community. Compared to the background stations, methane content in pockmark sediments increased sharply from the surface to 40-60 ml/dm3 in the 20-30cm horizon. High rates of bacterial sulfate reduction (SR) were detected throughout the core (0-40 cm); the maximum of 74 micromol/(dm3 day) was located in subsurface horizons (15-20 cm). The highest rates of anaerobic methane oxidation (AMO), up to 80 micromol/(dm3 day), were detected in the same horizon. Good coincidence of the AMO and SR profiles with stoichiometry close to 1:1 is evidence in favor of a close relation between these processes performed by a consortium of methanotrophic archaea and sulfate-reducing bacteria. Methane isotopic composition in subsurface sediments of the pockmark (from -53.0 to -56.5% per hundred) does not rule out the presence of methane other than the biogenic methane from the deep horizons of the sedimentary cover.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]