Abstract

Cold seeps where methane-rich fluids escape from the seafloor generally support enormous biomass of chemosynthetic organisms and associated fauna. In addition to transporting a great amount of methane toward the seafloor, cold seeps also contribute to the aged, dissolved organic carbon (DOC) pool in the deep ocean. Here, two sediment cores from the “Haima cold seeps,” northern South China Sea and a nearby reference core were analyzed for pore-water sulfate and DOC concentrations, δ13C of DOC, and optical properties of dissolved organic matter (DOM). High DOC concentrations (0.9–3.7 mM) accompanied by extremely low δ13C values (−43.9 to −76.2‰) suggest the conversion of methane into sedimentary DOC pool in the seep sediments. Parallel factor analysis (PARAFAC) of the fluorescence excitation-emission matrices shows higher fluorescent intensities of labile protein-like components (C2 and C4) and lower fluorescent intensities of refractory humic-like components (C1 and C3) in the seep cores compared to the reference core. The intensity of C2 is positively correlated with DOC concentrations and δ13C-DOC in the seep sediments, suggesting that the labile protein-like DOM was produced by the anaerobic oxidation of methane (AOM). Moreover, low humification index (HIX) and high biological index (BIX) values also indicate intensified production of relatively labile DOM with lower degradation degree in the seep cores compared to the reference core. Hence, we highlight that methane-derived DOC may serve as important carbon and energy sources for heterotrophic microbial communities due to its relatively labile nature.

Highlights

  • Dissolved organic carbon (DOC) in marine sediments represents an important by-product during the mineralization of particulate organic matter (POC; Aller, 1978; Berner, 1980; Komada et al, 2013; Burdige et al, 2016)

  • The concentrations and δ13C values of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) generally remain constant throughout the reference core, whereas both seep cores exhibit significantly higher DOC concentrations and lower δ13C

  • The downcore profiles of DOC concentrations mirror that of δ13C values at both seep cores, with higher DOC concentrations corresponding to lower δ13C values and vice versa

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Summary

Introduction

Dissolved organic carbon (DOC) in marine sediments represents an important by-product during the mineralization of particulate organic matter (POC; Aller, 1978; Berner, 1980; Komada et al, 2013; Burdige et al, 2016). Labile DOC in Seep Sediments sediments (Burdige, 2002; Komada et al, 2013) This net production of DOC results in significantly higher pore water DOC concentrations than bottom seawater (Martin and McCorkle, 1993; Alperin et al, 1994; Burdige et al, 1999). With the ongoing POC degradation in the sediments, increasingly amount of highly degraded, low-molecular-weight refractory DOC is produced and accumulated in the pore water. Based on numerical modeling results, Burdige et al (2016) concluded that refractory DOC accounted for > 95% of the total pore-water DOC except that in the sediments close to the seafloor

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