Kw. Mandernack et al., Sulfur cycling in wetland peat of the New Jersey Pinelands and its effect on stream water chemistry, GEOCH COS A, 64(23), 2000, pp. 3949-3964
The dynamics of sulfur cycling in wetland peat along an elevational transec
t at high, intermediate, and low locations (MS, NW, and LB sites, respectiv
ely) was investigated in the watershed of McDonalds Branch within the New J
ersey Pinelands, by utilizing both soil incubation experiments (with (SO42-
)-S-35 as a radiotracer) and stable isotope (delta S-34 and delta O-18) ana
lyses of soil, rain, and streamwater. The results indicate that sulfur cycl
ing can vary greatly among different portions of the watershed and this can
have large effects on streamwater chemistry and delta S-34 values over dis
tances as short as 1 km. Laboratory incubations of peat samples collected i
n July 1993 revealed the co-occurrence of dissimilatory sulfate reduction (
DSR; rates ranging from 0.2 to 22.1 nmol/wet g/day) and net generation of s
ulfate (NaH2PO4 extractable) in the porewater. Generation of sulfate, which
was most pronounced at the LB site, may involve oxidation of reduced sulfu
r in the pear and/or hydrolysis of ester sulfates (ES). Seasonal changes in
streamwater SO42-/Cl- molar ratios were similar at LB and NW, being low du
ring the summer and high in the winter, probably a result of higher rates o
f DSR within the peat during the summer. Consistent with this, higher delta
S-34 values of sulfate in streamwater at NW during the summer are attribut
able to kinetic isotope effects associated with DSR. In contrast to NW, del
ta S-34 values of streamwater sulfate at LB were consistently lower, fluctu
ated little throughout the year, and were most negative during the summer (
as much as 9 parts per thousand lower than streamwater at NW 1 km upstream)
. In comparison to NW, SO42-/Cl- ratios were lower in streamwater at LB thr
oughout most of the year except for reversals during the summer, which coin
cided with the lowest delta S-34 values. In addition, there was a marked di
fference in the relationship of delta O-18 vs. delta S-34 Of sulfate in LB
and NW streamwater, further suggesting that sulfur cycling varies greatly o
ver relatively short distances within this watershed. In order to explain s
ome of these site-specific differences in streamwater SO42-/Cl- ratios, del
ta S-34, and delta O-18 values, we hypothesize that the ES pool at LB may,
by means of hydrolysis or isotopic exchange with streamwater sulfate, serve
as an additional source of isotopically light sulfate to streamwater throu
ghout most of the year. During the summer, drier conditions lower the water
table at LB and enhance oxidation of reduced sulfur which releases a pulse
of even isotopically lighter sulfate to the stream. Copyright (C) 2000 Els
evier Science Ltd.