See more from this Session: General Wetland Soils: II
The contribution of reduced S species to total S at the beginning of the experiment increased in the order: Thai soil (30%) < sandy German marsh soil (48%) < loamy German marsh soil (54%) < clayey German marsh soil (63%). The oxidation state changes followed a zero-order kinetics. For all soils, aeration times up to 60 minutes resulted only in minor oxidation of reduced S forms. For the clayey and the loamy soils, also within 12 h (one low-tide/high-tide sequence), only about 10% of the initial reduced S pool was oxidized, whereas the changes were larger for the sandy soils. Within 21 days, between 40% (sandy German marsh soil) and 73% (clayey German marsh soil, Thai intertidal soil) of the initial reduced S pool was oxidized. The relative contribution of abiotic and biotic reactions to the oxidation of reduced S was 40% and 60%, respectively (exception: sandy German marsh soil with an abiotic contribution of 70%). In summary, S oxidation was much faster for the intertidal soil from Thailand compared to the German intertidal soils. For the latter, the S oxidation rates decrease with increasing mean grain size and decreasing initial reduced S pools.
See more from this Session: General Wetland Soils: II