Abstract

AbstractThe increasing concentrations of methane (CH4) in the atmosphere stress the importance of monitoring and quantifying the fluxes from coastal environments. In nine sampling campaigns between 2013 and 2014, we measured the spatial CH4 concentrations, identified major sources and calculated the fluxes at the air‐water interface in an eutrophic tropical embayment, Guanabara Bay, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. The bay presented high spatial variability of CH4 concentrations, without a significant trend with salinity, but observed the influence of the urban areas at its watershed. Although the more polluted sector of the bay accounts for about 10% of the sampled surface area, it contributed to one half of the bay's total CH4 emissions. In most cases, high CH4 concentrations seemed be sustained by allochtonous sources such as the sewage network and polluted rivers, especially under high accumulated precipitation conditions. In the most stratified area, at the inner and centre of the Bay, CH4 concentrations were not significantly higher in bottom hypoxic waters than in surface waters, suggesting that CH4 diffusion from these sediments was modest, due to the prevalence of sulphate reduction over methanogenesis. Our calculated annual air‐sea fluxes (565–980 μmol m−2 d−1) are well above those of most estuaries worldwide, showing that urban pollution can be an important source of CH4 to the coastal waters and even more significant than the presence of organic‐rich environments, like salt marshes and mangroves. Comparing the greenhouse gas emissions in terms of CO2‐equivalent, CH4 emissions reduced the net CO2 sink in Guanabara Bay by 16%.

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