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The Global Methane Cycle

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Title: The Global Methane Cycle


1
The Global Methane Cycle
2
Methane
  • CH4
  • Colorless gas
  • Component of the atmosphere
  • Main component of natural gas
  • CH4 2O2?CO2 2H20

3
Why is methane important?
  • Clean fuel source
  • It is a powerful greenhouse gas
  • It removes Hydroxyls from the troposphere
  • Affects concentrations of water vapor and ozone
    in the stratosphere
  • Used in the industrial production of hydrogen,
    methanol, acetic acid, and acetic anhydride

4
Methane as a fuel source
  • Used as a fuel source for electricity generation,
    heating, and cooking
  • Methanol is used in vehicles
  • Heat of combustion is about 802 kJ/mol
  • Highest heat to weight ratio
  • Produces the least CO2 per unit of heat

5
How much methane is there?
  • 350 ppb 18,000 years ago
  • Today atmospheric levels are 1800 ppb and rising
  • The most abundant greenhouse gas after CO2 and
    H2O vapor
  • Most abundant trace gas in the atmosphere

6
Where is methane from?
  • It is produced by organisms and geological
    processes
  • Livestock produces 37 of all human-induced
    methane
  • Most is released from wetlands in the northern
    hemisphere and tropics

7
Methane is cycled
  • Certain organisms and geological processes
    produce methane
  • Other organisms and processes use methane and
    release new products
  • Several organisms and processes are involved
  • The methane cycle is part of the larger carbon
    cycle

8
Carbon cycle diagram
9
Sources Natural
  • Wetlands
  • Termites
  • Oceans
  • Hydrates Clathrates

10
Wetlands
  • Produces 225 Tg per year.
  • 50 of wetlands are peat rich.
  • Produced by methanogenic bacteria decomposing
    organic materials in anaerobic environments.
  • CH4 produced in sediments are diffused to the
    surface via the water column, gas bubbles, or
    plants.
  • C6H12O6 -gt 3CO2 3CH4
  • Massive amounts of CH4 trapped in permafrost
    could be released if temperatures rise.

11
Termites
  • Produces 20 Tg per year
  • Concentrated mostly in grasslands or forests
  • Produced in the breakdown of cellulose by CH4
    oxidizing bacteria

12
Oceans
  • Produces 15 Tg per year
  • Sources are poorly known.
  • Coastal areas have higher but more variable
    concentrations.
  • Produced by seepage areas in seabed with organic
    rich nutrients.

13
Hydrates
  • Produces 10 Tg per year
  • CH4 Hydrates are ridgid water cages surrounding
    CH4 molecules.
  • Mostly on the continental shelf of all latitudes.
  • Hydrate stability requires high pressures and
    cold temperatures. Most hydrates occur at depths
    and regions insulated from climate change.
  • Climate warming would lead to destabilization of
    hydrates and release CH4 molecules.

14
Sources Anthropogenic
  • Rice Cultivation
  • Fossil Fuels
  • Biomass Burning
  • Landfills

15
Rice Cultivation
  • Produces 100 Tg per year
  • Production has increased over 40 since the
    1980s.
  • Produced by anaerobic consumption of organic
    material by methanogenic bacteria

16
Domestic Animals
  • Produces 115 Tg per year
  • 75 are produced from cows
  • Produced from fermentation of carbohydrates in
    the rumen. Microbes in the rumen are capable of
    breaking down cellulose.
  • Quanity Quality of feed, plus weight, age,
    activity level, and species affect how much CH4
    is produced.

17
Fossil Fuels
  • Produces 110 Tg per year
  • Coal Gas and Natural Gas consist almost entirely
    of methane.
  • Fossil Fuel sources are coal mining as well as
    exploration, production, transmissions.

18
Biomass Burning
  • Produces 40 Tg per year
  • CH4 is released when vegetation is burned.
  • Amount produced depends on the burning
    technology, temperature, moisture and carbon
    content in the vegetation.

19
Landfills
  • Produces 40 Tg per year
  • Decomposition of biodegradable organic material
    in landfills produces CO2 and CH4.

20
Sinks
  • Losses of CH4 occur in lithosphere and the
    atmosphere
  • Lithosphere Dry soil oxidation
  • Atmosphere Trophospheric reactions with OH and
    losses to the stratosphere

21
Dry Soil Oxidation
  • A loss of 30 Tg per year
  • Can act as an sink for both atmospheric CH4 and
    CH4 produced in deeper soil layers.
  • Methanotrophs use CH4 as a source of carbon in a
    process called methane oxidation
  • Methanotrophs exist in two forms
  • 'high capacity - low affinity' methanotrophs
  • low capacity - high affinity' methanotrophs
  • Changes in land use practices, better fertilizer
    application, and land conversion may help prevent
    the loss of methane sinks.

22
Tropospheric Reactions With OH
  • A loss of 510 Tg per year
  • The most dominant form of CH4 loss.
  • OH CH4 -gt CH3 H2O
  • CH4 is removed when it reacts with the hydroxyl
    radical OH. This happens when cosmic rays strike
    a water vapor molecule.
  • Hydroxyl Radicals are considered the Detergent
    of the atmosphere because they react with many
    pollutants.

23
Losses To The Stratosphere
  • A loss of 40 Tg per year
  • Plays a minor role in removing CH4 from the
    atmosphere
  • CH4 is loss to the stratosphere when it reacts
    with OH, Cl and O(1D)
  • The stratosphere is very dry and any water vapor
    produced from methane oxidation becomes a
    greenhouse gas itself.

24
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25
General Facts about Methane
  • Known as a well-mixed greenhouse gas because of
    long lifetime so it is able to evenly distribute
    in atmosphere
  • More potent than CO2, but concentration of CO2 is
    higher so CO2 has greater effect on global
    warming
  • -Control of methane emissions turns out to be a
    more powerful lever to control global warming
    than anticipated

26
Effects on the Environment
  • Methane is a greenhouse gas -gtabsorbs heat in the
    atmosphere-gtIncrease in temperature
  • Since Industrial Revolution, atmospheric methane
    concentration has doubled
  • Contributes about 20 towards the greenhouse
    effect, second to CO2

27
Concentration of Methane over time
28
Controversy
  • Levels of Greenhouse gases can be determined by
  • -measuring level of gases after mixing with
    other gases in the atmosphere (official IPCC)
  • OR
  • -measuring level of gases before entering
    atmosphere.

29
Prevention for the Future
  • Methane to Market (United States, the UK, China,
    Russia, Brazil, India, Italy, Japan, Australia
    and Nigeria)
  • Goal To recover Methane and use it as clean
    energy.

30
  • Federal Clean Air Act
  • Collection of methane gas from landfills and
    treated
  • Processing manure using anaerobic digesters
    making methane available for conversion to useful
    energy
  • New rice harvesting method, reduce methane gas,
    increase yield

31
Methane Cycling Microbes
32
Methanogenesis - The Big Picture
  • Why is this process interesting?
  • Terminus of anaerobic food chain.
  • Prevents sequestering of large amts or organic
    material in anaerobic ecosystems.
  • Potential natural gas source.
  • Methanogens are the most important CO2- reducing
    prokaryotes, but are also a source of greenhouse
    gas (CH4).

33
Methanogenesis within the Carbon Cycle.
Water column
sediments
34
Methanogenesis The Process
4 H2 H HCO3- CH4 3H2O
Overall Reaction
35
And who are these?
  • METHANOGENS
  • Archaea, ubiquitous in highly reducing habitats,
    also found in some oxic habitats
  • Obligate anaerobes
  • H2 CO2 --gt methane (CH4)
  • Autotrophic (fix CO2), chemolithotrophic (use
    inorganic H2 as e- donor)
  • Some use endproducts of fermentation (acetate,
    etc.)
  • Some important genera Methanococcus,
    Methanosarcina
  • Capable of using elemental Sulfur as a terminal
    e- acceptor (anaerobic respiration - sulfur
    reduction)
  • METHANOTROPHS
  • Bacteria
  • Aerobes
  • Utilize methane
  • CH4 O2 --gt CO2 H2O
  • Rxn happens at interface btwn anoxic and oxic
    layers of soil (as CH4 diffuses up).
  • Genus Methylomonas

36
Phylogeny of Methanogens
37
The Methanotrophs
38
Cool and current studies
  • A new biogeochemical cycling pathway couples
    anaerobic methane oxidation to denitrification.
    (Nature vol. 440, 04/06).
  • Freshwater sediments receive high loads of
    anthropogenic NO3- and CH4.
  • Theoretically microbes should be able to use
    NO3-/NO2- to anaerobically oxidize CH4, but prior
    to this report it has not been shown.
  • This study showed direct, anaerobic oxidation of
    methane coupled to denitrification in the
    complete absence of O2.
  • CH4 NO3-/NO2- H ---gt CO2 N2 H2O
  • consortium consisted of two microbes an
    uncultured bacteria and an archaea related to
    marine methanotrophic Archaea.
  • Relevance
  • new pathways fill in holes in our understanding
    of global biogeochemical cycling.

39
Methanogens on Mars? FEMS Micro. Ecol. (2007)
Greenland Ice Sheet
  • 10 ppbv CH4 on mars, estimated 300 tons lost/year
    - 270 tons/year must be generated to offset loss.
  • Is this biogenic or abiogenic methane?
  • Metabolic rates of methanogens in extreme cold on
    Earth can be used to estimate metabolic rates and
    cell densities of martian methanogens.

40
Conclusions
  • Methane is the simplest hydrocarbon
  • Methane is a clean fuel source
  • Methane is a powerful greenhouse gas
  • Methane is part of the carbon cycle

41
Conclusions
  • The major reservoirs of CH4 are fossil fuel
    reservoirs, hydrates and Clathrates, and the
    atmosphere
  • Wetlands are the dominant natural source of CH4
  • Domestic animals are the largest anthropogenic
    source of CH4
  • The Hydroxyl Radical OH, is the dominant form of
    CH4 loss.
  • There has been an increase in terrestrial sources
    and a decrease in sinks, leading to excess CH4 in
    the atmosphere

42
Conclusions
  • Reducing Methane will have a stronger influence
    in reduce Greenhouse effect
  • Methane To Market and Federal Clean Air Act
    hopes to reduce Methane output
  • New agriculture and use of anaerobic digesters
    also reduce Methane output

43
Conclusions
  • The methane cycle is composed of two groups
    methanogens (produce methane) and methanotrophs
    (consume methane).
  • Methanogenesis is carried out anaerobically by
    Archaea, methanotrophy is carried out aerobically
    by bacteria.
  • Methanogens are ubiquitous in anoxic environments
    (wetlands, sediments, etc.) as well as some oxic
    ones.

44
REFERENCES
  • Madigan, Martinko, and Parker. 1997. Brock
    Biology of Microorganisms. 8th ed. Prentice-Hall,
    New Jersey.
  • Stanier, R.Y., Ingraham, J.L., Wheelis, M.L., and
    Painter, P.R. 1986. The Microbial World. 5th ed.
    Prentice-Hall, New Jersey.
  • Strous, M. et al. 2006. A microbial consortium
    couples anaerobic methane oxidation to
    denitrification. Nature, 440918-921.
  • Price, P.B. 2007. Microbial life in glacial ice
    and implications for a cold origin of life. FEMS
    Microbiol. Ecol. 59217-231.
  • http//www.newscientist.com/article.ns?idmg187251
    24.500
  • http//www.meteor.iastate.edu/gcp/studentpapers/19
    96/atmoschem/brockberg.html
  • http//www.epa.gov/methane/sources.html
  • http//www.ghgonline.org/methanesinksoil.htm
  • http//www.igac.noaa.gov/newsletter/21/methane_sin
    k.php
  • http//earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Newsroom/NewImage
    s/images.php3?img_id16827
  • http//www.grida.no/climate/ipcc_tar/wg1/134.htm4
    211

45
References
  • http//www.scienceagogo.com/news/20050625005443dat
    a_trunc_sys.shtml
  • http//www.ace.mmu.ac.uk/eae/Global_Warming/Older/
    Methane.html
  • http//egov.oregon.gov/ENERGY/RENEW/Biomass/Enviro
    nment.shtml
  • http//www.ens-newswire.com/ens/jul2005/2005-07-19
    -01.asp
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