“…More recently, researchers have begun to quantify the hydrocarbon removal rates from the LNAPL bodies themselves by estimating fluxes of biodegradation reactants and products in nearby groundwater and soil gas (Interstate Technology & Research Council [ITRC], ; Johnson, Lundegard, & Liu, ; Lundegard, & Johnson, ). For instance, elevated CO 2 effluxes have been measured at ground surface above multiple LNAPL bodies (McCoy, Zimbron, Sale, & Lyverse, ; Sihota & Mayer, ; Sihota, Mayer, Toso, & Atwater, 2013; Sihota, Singurindy, & Mayer, ), and emitted CO 2 has been inferred by radiocarbon analysis (Eichert, McAlexander, Lyverse, Michalski, & Sihota, ; McCoy et al., ; Sihota & Mayer, ) and correlation to subsurface LNAPL distribution (Sihota, McAlexander, Lyverse, & Mayer, ) due to biodegradation processes. In cases where subsurface microbial demand is likely high and O 2 supplies are low (e.g., LNAPL associated with labile denatured ethanol fuel in a waterlogged setting), elevated CH 4 effluxes have also been observed (Sihota et al., ).…”