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posted by Fnord666 on Wednesday August 02 2017, @03:19AM   Printer-friendly
from the also-useful-at-frat-parties dept.

Arthur T Knackerbracket has found the following story:

Lurking in a lake half a mile beneath Antarctica's icy surface, methane-eating microbes may mitigate the release of this greenhouse gas into the atmosphere as ice sheets retreat.

A new study published in Nature Geoscience traces methane's previously unknown path below the ice in a spot that was once thought to be inhospitable to life. Study researchers sampled the water and sediment in Antarctica's subglacial Whillans Lake by drilling 800 meters through ice for the first time ever. Next they measured methane amounts and used genomic analyses to find that 99 percent of methane released into the lake is gobbled up by microbes.

These tiny microorganisms may have a big impact on a warming world by preventing methane from seeping into the atmosphere when ice sheets melt, said Brent Christner, a University of Florida microbiologist and co-author on the study.

"This is an environment that most people look at and don't think it could ever really directly impact us," Christner said. "But this is a process that could have climatic implications."

Additional coverage at the NSF (National Science Foundation), who funded the research team.

Journal Reference: Alexander B. Michaud, John E. Dore, Amanda M. Achberger, Brent C. Christner, Andrew C. Mitchell, Mark L. Skidmore, Trista J. Vick-Majors, John C. Priscu. Microbial oxidation as a methane sink beneath the West Antarctic Ice Sheet. Nature Geoscience, 2017; DOI: 10.1038/ngeo2992

-- submitted from IRC


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  • (Score: 2) by c0lo on Thursday August 03 2017, @05:16AM

    by c0lo (156) Subscriber Badge on Thursday August 03 2017, @05:16AM (#548234) Journal

    If we figure out how to capture the methane, we'll have better uses for it than feeding bacteria...

    I wouldn't dismiss the idea of deriving proteins/lipids from methane by using microbes as that useless.

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