Options
2000
Journal Article
Title
Sulfur cycling of intertidal Wadden Sea sediments (Königshafen, Island of Sylt, Germany): Sulfate reduction and sulfur gas emission
Abstract
Sulfate reduction rates (SRR sub t) and reduced inorganic sulfur pools (RIS) in Wadden Sea sediment as well as sulfur gas emissions directly to the atmosphere were measured at intervals of 2 to 12 months from 1991 to 1994. Three stations were chosen in the intertidal embayment, Königshafen, representing the range of sediments found in the Wadden Sea: Organic-poor and Arenicola marina inhabited medium sand, and organic-rich muddy sand. Maximum SRR sub t were 2 to 5 times higher in muddy sand than in the sandy sediments. The depth-integrated SRR sub t varied 12 to 13-fold on a seasonal basis at the three stations. Although temperature controls biochemical processes. the overall control is more complex due to the simultaneous influence of other seasonal factors such as availability of organic matter and oxidation level of surface sediment. The sedimentary RIS pools were low due to iron limitation and contained only 30 % acid volatile sulfur (AVS). Muddy sand had up to an order of magnitude more RIS than the two sandy sediments. The turnover of RIS was rapid (turnover time from ~ 1 to 32 h), fastest during summer and at the sandy stations. The emission of S-gases was dominated by H2S during summer (45 - 67 % of the total). and was highest in muddy and lowest in coarse sand. H2S was less important in early spring (3 - 49 % of the total). Other sulfur gases, such as COS, DMS and CS2, each accounted for less than 20 % of the total sulfur emissions with no specific temporal and spatial pattern. Due to the low content of metals in the sediment. the reduced sulfur pools are cycled rapidly with chemical and biological reoxidation at oxic-anoxic boundaries as a major sink. Thus. the emissions of H2S account for less than l of the sulfide produced.