EGU23-1962
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu23-1962
EGU General Assembly 2023
© Author(s) 2023. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Groundwater flow impacts on microbial communities and biogeochemistry in seafloor pockmarks

Lotta Purkamo1, Cátia M. Ehlert von Ahn2, Tom Jilbert3, Muhammad Muniruzzaman1, Annette Kock4,5, Herrman Bange4, Anna Jenner2, Michael E. Böttcher2, and Joonas Virtasalo1
Lotta Purkamo et al.
  • 1Geological Survey of Finland (GTK), Espoo, Finland
  • 2Leibniz Institute for Baltic Sea Research Warnemünde (IOW), Rostock, Germany
  • 3Department of Geosciences and Geography, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland
  • 4Marine Biogeochemistry, GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel, Kiel, Germany
  • 5Landesamt für Landwirtschaft, Umwelt und ländliche Räume Schleswig-Holstein, Flintbek, Germany

Biogeochemical processes and microbial community structure were investigated in sediment cores from three pockmarks in Hanko, Finland, in the northern Baltic Sea, and compared to groundwater and seawater measurements. Three studied pockmarks varied with the rate of submarine groundwater discharge (SGD). Based on e.g., chloride and DIC concentrations from sediment porewaters, pockmark D had the strongest groundwater influence, while in pockmark E SGD had ceased and therefore this pockmark resembled typical Baltic Sea water and sediment. The pockmark B was the intermediate representative of SGD. The inactive pockmark E had orders of magnitude higher methane concentrations compared to the active pockmarks, but interestingly, this did not reflect on the copy numbers of methanogenesis marker gene (mcrA) results, as pockmark B had equal methanogenesis gene pool as the pockmark E. Sulfate reducer numbers measured with dsrB marker gene was highest in pockmark E sample but also many orders of magnitude higher in other pockmark sediments compared to seawater and groundwater, where the sulfate reducer numbers were only negligible. Reactive transport modeling (RTM) established that the porewater systems in pockmarks D and B were dominated by groundwater advection pushing reactants for biogeochemical reaction into a narrow zone at sediment surface. The advection reduced the organic matter accumulation which results in absence of sulfate-methane transition zone in these pockmarks and concentrates the microbial activity to these habitats. Microbial community structure revealed with phylogenetic marker gene amplicon sequencing reflects the groundwater in active pockmarks, as notable populations of ammonia-oxidizing archaea and nitrifying bacteria in pockmarks are mainly originating from groundwater. RTM also estimated low rates of sulfate consumption and low rates of methane, ammonium and DIC in the active pockmarks.

How to cite: Purkamo, L., von Ahn, C. M. E., Jilbert, T., Muniruzzaman, M., Kock, A., Bange, H., Jenner, A., Böttcher, M. E., and Virtasalo, J.: Groundwater flow impacts on microbial communities and biogeochemistry in seafloor pockmarks, EGU General Assembly 2023, Vienna, Austria, 24–28 Apr 2023, EGU23-1962, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu23-1962, 2023.