Auteurs
Leon PM Lamers, Sarah‐J Falla, Edyta M Samborska, Ivo AR van Dulken, Gijs van Hengstum, Jan GM Roelofs
Publicatiedatum
2002/3
Tijdschrift
Limnology and oceanography
Volume
47
Editie
2
Pagina's
585-593
Beschrijving
Increased sulfur loads originating from polluted surface water and groundwater, and from enhanced atmospheric input, are a major threat to the biogeochemical functioning and biodiversity of freshwater wetlands. Sulfate reduction, normally playing a modest role in these systems, becomes the most important biogeochemical process, inducing severe eutrophication and sulfide toxicity. In field enclosure experiments we observed striking differences between the responses of two freshwater marshes to sulfate. On one location sulfate addition resulted in strong phosphorus mobilization without sulfide accumulation, whereas high sediment sulfide concentrations, known to be toxic to wetland macrophytes, were reached in the other marsh without eutrophication occurring. The results could be explained by differences in groundwater iron discharge and nutrient contents of the peat sediments. Sulfate reduction rates …
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