Bulínová, M.Rouillard, A.Schomacker, A.Kjellman, S.E.Gudasz, C.Olid Garcia, CarolinaRydberg, J.Panieri, G.Hodson, A.van der Bilt, W.G.M.Røthe, T.O.Bindler, R.2025-11-262025-12-312025-07-012169-8953https://hdl.handle.net/2445/224431Global estimates of methane (CH4) emissions from lakes to the atmosphere rely on understanding CH4 processes at the sediment‐water interface (SWI). However, in the Arctic, the variability, magnitude, and environmental drivers of CH4 production and flux across the SWI are poorly understood. Here, we estimate CH4 diffusive fluxes from the sediment into the water column in 10 lakes in Arctic Scandinavia and Svalbard using porewater modeling and mass transfer estimates, which we then compare with 60 published estimates from the Arctic to the tropics. Diffusion of CH4 in the sampled lake sediments ranged from -0.46 to 3.1 mmol m-2 day-1, which is consistent with previous reports for Arctic and boreal lakes, and lower than for temperate and tropical biomes. Methane production occurs primarily within the top ∼10 cm of sediment, indicating a biogenic origin. Random forest predictive modeling of the sampled lakes revealed that condition promoting production and deposition of autochthonous organic carbon in Arctic lakes drive CH4 diffusion into the water column by fueling sediment CH4 production. For small lakes across biomes, determinants of the estimated CH4 flux were also best captured by climate predictors, with warmer and wetter conditions favoring ecosystem productivity and enhancing flux but also lake morphometry resulting in important regional variability in estimates. Our study emphasizes the importance of quantifying diffusive CH4 fluxes from sediments in diverse lake types to account for differences in the controls on primary production and the preservation of organic carbon across and within different biomes, to refine CH4 emission estimates in a</em></p><p><em>warming climate.22 p.application/pdfeng(c) American Geophysical Union (AGU), 2025BiogeoquímicaMetàLlacsEcologia dels llacsCanvi climàticSediments lacustresBiogeochemistryMethaneLakesLake ecologyClimatic changeLake sedimentsIncreased Ecosystem Productivity Boosts Methane Production in Arctic Lake Sedimentsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/article7615232025-11-26info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess