Monday, May 19, 2008

Methane Bubbles Make Global Warming Worse

By Ker Than, LiveScience Staff Writer
posted: 06 September 2006 01:05 pm ET

Methane gas bubbles up from Siberian lakes at up to six times the rate previously thought as a result of global warming, a new study suggests. The result: more global warming.

As the planet warms, frozen ground called "permafrost" in high latitude-regions like Siberia and Alaska thaws out.

One consequence: Carbon in the permafrost is released into the atmosphere. Another is that thawing permafrost along the margins of a lake dislodges frozen plant and animal remains, causing them to sink to the bottom of the lakes, where they decompose and produce methane, a potent greenhouse gas.

Some of the methane diffuses through the lake water and into the air, but the majority of it escapes by bubbling to the surface. Until now, this bubbling, or "ebullition," process has been hard to measure because of the difficulty involved in determining where and when the bubbles will occur.

In the new study, researchers used a combination of aerial surveys, remote sensors and year-round measurements of places in two Siberian lakes where methane bubbling was known to occur. To identify bubble hot spots, they surveyed the lakes in autumn, when bubbles rising to the surface freeze in place, leaving behind visible trails.

Extrapolating their data to Siberia's other lakes, the researchers estimate that more than 4 million tons of methane is being released each year. This is between 10 and 63 percent higher than present estimates.

The study, led by Katey Walter at the University Alaska, Fairbanks, is detailed in the Sept. 7 issue of the journal Nature.

Other studies have calculated that about 500 billion tons of carbon is locked up in Siberia's permafrost and that up to 90 percent of it could be released if the region continues to warm as expected.

If this happens, the coming decades will see an increase in the number and size of methane-releasing thaw lakes, scientists say. And while methane from Siberian lakes is a relatively modest contributor to climate change compared to human greenhouse emissions by industry and automobiles, it helps intensify a positive feedback mechanism for global warming.

The cycle works like this: Thawing permafrost dumps tons of previously frozen organic material into lake bottoms, producing methane. The methane finds its way into the atmosphere, where it works with other greenhouse gases to trap the sun's rays. The planet warms even more, causing permafrost to thaw at a quicker pace.

Other Global Warming Effects :

Seas Rise
More Wildfires
Deserts to Grow
Greenland Melts
Mountains Grow
Ground Collapses
Glaciers Disappear
Allergies Get Worse
Summer Gets Longer
Animal DNA Changing
Animals Change Behavior
Rivers Melt Sooner in Spring
Increased Plant Production
Hurricanes Get Stronger
Some Trees Benefit
Lakes Disappear


Source : http://www.livescience.com/environment/060906_methane_bubbles.html

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