“…In waters overlying continental shelves, however, the organic-rich sediment serves as a major source of CH 4 in the water column compared to net production in the mixed layer (Martens and Berner, 1974;Martens and Klump, 1980;Reeburgh, 2007). The shallow-water [CH 4 ] can also be elevated due to gas seepages and/or oil spills (Bernard et al, 1976;Reed and Kaplan, 1977;Rehder et al, 1998Rehder et al, , 2002Kessler et al, 2011;Gülzow et al, 2013) and advection of CH 4 -rich freshwaters (Sackett and Brooks, 1975;Cline et al, 1986;Zhang et al, 2008). Since CH 4 is oxidized to dissolved inorganic carbon via microbial oxidation processes (Sieburth et al, 1987;Jones, 1991;Reeburgh, 2007) and/or lost via sea-air gas exchange (Crutzen, 1991;Bange et al, 1994), determining [CH 4 ] in surface water with high spatiotemporal data coverage is critical in adding to our understanding of the marine CH 4 cycle and furthermore of the marine carbon cycle.…”