Sulphide release from anoxic sediments in relation to iron availability and organic matter recalcitrance and its effects on inorganic phosphorus recycling
✍ Scribed by Gianmarco Giordani; Marco Bartoli; Matteo Cattadori; Pierluigi Viaroli
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1996
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 801 KB
- Volume
- 329
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1573-5141
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
This research aims to analyse the sediment capacity to buffer free sulphide release in three coastal lagoons which differ in terms of eutrophication level, tide influence and primary producer communities . A preliminary estimate of soluble reactive phosphorus (SRP) regeneration coupled with sulphide fluxes is also made . Sediment profiles of ferrous and ferric iron and reduced sulphur pools were determined in three stations in the Bassin d'Arcachon (South West France), in one site in the Etang du Provost lagoon (Southern France), and in three stations in the Sacca di Goro lagoon (Northern Italy) . Laboratory experiments were also conducted by incubating sediment slurries .
Slurries from the French lagoons were also enriched with about 2% d .w. of organic detritus obtained from the dominant macrophytes of each site, namely Zostera noltii and Ruppia cirrhosa (Bassin d'Arcachon), and Ulva rigida (Etang du Provost) . In the Sacca di Goro, slurry experiments were conducted at two sites with different salinity range, sediment composition and hydrodynamics .
Field data showed that concentrations of available iron (Fe(II)+Fe(III)) ranged from a minimum of 28 .5 pmol cm -3 (Etang du Provost) to a maximum of 275 .7 µcool cm -3 (Sacca di Goro) . Moreover, in the French lagoons, acid volatile sulphide (AVS) accumulation in the superficial sediment was related to ferrous iron concentrations . Laboratory experiments showed that in spite of strong reducing conditions, sulphide and SRP release was weaker in iron-rich sediments and in those enriched with the most refractory organic matter . The highest fluxes were detected in sediment slurries from the Etang du Provost, which had the lowest iron content, supplied by 2% of the labile detritus from Ulva rigida. In this case, SRP release was directly related to sulphide production .
Two factors seem significant to evaluate the buffer capacity against free sulphide and SRP release from anoxic sediment : organic matter biodegradability, which forces sediment toward reducing conditions, and iron availability, which can affect sulphide mobility as well as the ironhydroxide-phosphate-sulphide system .