New, unexpected consequences of climate change keep presenting themselves. A new study from Uppsala University and SLU shows that a decreased snow cover on frozen lakes in boreal forests may inhibit the activity of methane degrading bacteria beneath the ice, thereby causing an increased net production of methane, a powerful greenhouse greenhouse gas.
Driven by climate change, thawing permafrost is radically changing
Decreasing snow cover causes increasing methane production in
Chapter 3: Polar regions — Special Report on the Ocean and
New Arctic Council Reports Underline the Growing Concerns About
Half of world's glaciers to 'disappear' with 1.5C of global
A synthesis of carbon dioxide and methane dynamics during the ice
Methane Explosions Strike the Frozen Ground in Siberia Sparking
Phosphorus control and dredging decrease methane emissions from
What's Happening Under the Ice? - BCLSS
Alabama, Alaska, and the Mystery of Arctic Methane
TC - Methane pathways in winter ice of a thermokarst lake–lagoon
Water, Free Full-Text
Methane hunters: what explains the surge in the potent greenhouse gas?