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Deep-biosphere methane production stimulated by geofluids in the Nankai accretionary complex
Author(s) -
Akira Ijiri,
Fumio Inagaki,
Yusuke Kubo,
Rishi R. Adhikari,
Shohei Hattori,
Tatsuhiko Hoshino,
Hiroyuki Imachi,
Shinsuke Kawagucci,
Yuki Morono,
Yoko Ohtomo,
Shuhei Ono,
Sanae Sakai,
Ken Takai,
Tomohiro Toki,
David T. Wang,
Marcos Y. Yoshinaga,
Gail Lee Arnold,
Juichiro Ashi,
David H. Case,
Tomas Feseker,
KaiUwe Hinrichs,
Yojiro Ikegawa,
Minoru Ikehara,
Jens Kallmeyer,
Hidenori Kumagai,
Mark A. Lever,
Sumito Morita,
Koichi Nakamura,
Yuki Nakamura,
Manabu Nishizawa,
Victoria J. Orphan,
Hans Røy,
Frauke Schmidt,
Atsushi Tani,
Wataru Tanikawa,
Takeshi Terada,
Hitoshi Tomaru,
Takeshi Tsuji,
Urumu Tsunogai,
Yasuhiko T. Yamaguchi,
Naohiro Yoshida
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
science advances
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.928
H-Index - 146
ISSN - 2375-2548
DOI - 10.1126/sciadv.aao4631
Subject(s) - methanogenesis , biosphere , methane , geology , submarine , earth science , geochemistry , environmental science , oceanography , biology , ecology
Microbial life inhabiting subseafloor sediments plays an important role in Earth's carbon cycle. However, the impact of geodynamic processes on the distributions and carbon-cycling activities of subseafloor life remains poorly constrained. We explore a submarine mud volcano of the Nankai accretionary complex by drilling down to 200 m below the summit. Stable isotopic compositions of water and carbon compounds, including clumped methane isotopologues, suggest that ~90% of methane is microbially produced at 16° to 30°C and 300 to 900 m below seafloor, corresponding to the basin bottom, where fluids in the accretionary prism are supplied via megasplay faults. Radiotracer experiments showed that relatively small microbial populations in deep mud volcano sediments (10 to 10 cells cm) include highly active hydrogenotrophic methanogens and acetogens. Our findings indicate that subduction-associated fluid migration has stimulated microbial activity in the mud reservoir and that mud volcanoes may contribute more substantially to the methane budget than previously estimated.

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