For
methane researcher, golf course bubbles are a first
18
September, 2018
For
golfers at the North Star Golf Club in Fairbanks, there’s an extra
perk: if you come at the right time of year, you can find methane
bubbles on the course. It’s been happening for the past two
decades, according to Roger Evans, the owner. People regularly poke
them with tees and light them on fire.
In
many respects, the North Star Golf Club looks like any other golf
course: emerald grass dotted with ponds, idyllic forest on all sides,
a flock of bothersome geese. But it’s full of dips and swells, like
a pond frozen mid-ripple.
That’s
not by design, Evans said.
“Twenty
five years ago, this was all a disked field that was all smooth,”
Evans said. “So this is all permafrost action.”
Evans
is out on his golf course in big boots, squelching through the
waterlogged grass to help scientist Katey Walter Anthony and her two
assistants find some methane bubbles. Walter Anthony is a research
professor at the University of Alaska Fairbanks. She’s been
studying methane bubbles in Alaska and Russia for almost 20 years.
Walter
Anthony says that the reason methane is being produced beneath this
turf likely has to do with the permafrost thaw Evans described. That
thaw triggers the breakdown of organic matter that has accumulated
beneath the soil over thousands of years.
“It’s
like opening the freezer door, making it accessible to microbes that
decompose it and turn it from organic carbon in the soil… back into
greenhouse gases,” Walter Anthony said.
Often
the greenhouse gas released is carbon dioxide. But when the
decomposition happens in an environment without a lot of oxygen, it
can produce methane too.
The
most obvious place for scientists to look for that kind of methane is
in lakes and wetlands, because standing water makes it hard for
oxygen to get into the soil. That’s where Walter Anthony usually
does her research.
“To
see and to hear about methane bubbles under grass in a golf course
lawn is very different than the type of environment we’re normally
sampling methane in,” Walter Anthony said.
This
golf course is not exactly a wetland, but after four inches of rain
in August, it is pretty soggy. And Evans says that the methane
bubbles usually appear during the wet seasons: spring and fall.
Walter
Anthony thinks rainwater may be pooling above a layer of impermeable
permafrost, creating the conditions for methane production.
After
about 20 minutes of searching, we finally find what we’re looking
for. Evans points it out.
The
bubble is sort of flat, not like the bigger ones that Evans has
described as beach balls that bulge up out of the ground. But when
you tap the ground with your foot, you can definitely tell that it’s
not normal grass. It wobbles like Jell-O. “It’s kind of like an
air mattress,” Walter Anthony’s colleague Philip Hanke said.
“Or
a water bed,” Evans added.
Using
a syringe, a sawed off plastic bottle and a few other tools they rig
on the spot, Walter Anthony and her team collect several vials of
methane gas. She’ll use those samples to confirm that the methane
really does come from thawed organic matter in the permafrost. She’s
pretty sure it does, based on the obvious permafrost thaw all around
us.
But
why is the methane forming bubbles?
Walter
Anthony cuts up a square of the soil to take a look at what’s
underneath.
“It’s
probably that little silt layer right there,” Walter Anthony said,
pointing.
Walter
Anthony hypothesizes that the density and fineness of the silt
combined with the layer of grass could make it hard for the methane
to escape. All the traffic the golf course gets could be part of it
too, compressing the top layer to make it even denser.
That’s
all interesting to Walter Anthony, but what she’s really curious
about is if this phenomenon is happening elsewhere on land.
“It’s
an area that I and some other colleagues have started thinking about:
can you get methane forming in terrestrial environments? But it’s a
very new area of science,” Walter Anthony said.
It’s
a new area of science because grasslands and boreal forests are
thought of as places where greenhouse gases are absorbed, not
released. But as permafrost thaw increases in the Interior —
releasing more trapped carbon — Walter Anthony wonders if that’s
changing. That would be really important for scientists to document
and build into climate models, since potential emissions from the
ground could contribute to global warming.
Walter
Anthony says that none of this is definitive yet, but that’s why it
merits further study.
Her
next step?
“I’m
probably going to go hiking through the woods… and look for some
gas bubbles,” Walter Anthony says.
Good article....but..why is her name "Walter?......and ..this you of methane release. Is very worrying. ..
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