Abstract
Sulfur isotopes have been widely used to trace the activity of sulfate reducing prokaryotes in modern and ancient geochemical settings and to estimate the role of this microbial metabolism in global sulfur cycling. Extensive pure culture data provide detailed insight into cellular mechanisms involved in microbial sulfate reduction. However, studies
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on natural communities of sulfate reducers are required for interpreting delta34S variations in sedimentary rocks, and these are much more limited. This thesis uses a flow-through reactor technique to fill this gap, and describes ranges in potential sulfate reduction rates (SRRs) and sulfur isotope fractionation effects (epsilon) for sediments sampled from four diverse modern geochemical settings including a brackish estuary (Schelde estuary, The Netherlands), a hypersaline soda lake (Mono Lake, California, USA), a shallow marine hydrothermal vent system (Vulcano, Italy) and a freshwater river (River Schelde, Belgium). Sediments were sampled as 2 cm thick slices using the flow-through reactor approach, designed to preserve the original physical, geochemical and microbial structure. The main experimental variables were incubation temperature (10, 20, 30, 40, 50, 60, 85 degree Celcius) and electron donor supply (natural substrate, lactate or acetate). Sulfate was supplied in excess. Data analysis was restricted to SSR and epsilon values obtained under steady state conditions. SRR varied from 5 to 179 nmol cm-3 h-1, with corresponding epsilon values of 5 to 43 per mil. The range in epsilon is similar to the total variability found in previous sediment incubation and pure culture experiments and is consistent with the standard isotope fractionation model of Rees (1973). Most experiments resulted in relatively small epsilon values (<20 per mil). Isotope fractionation was distinct at each sampling site and differences were most likely controlled by electron donor availability and microbial community size and structure, although salinity and cellular energetics may have also played a role. No overall clear SRR versus epsilon relationship was found for all sites, except within subsets of data. The range in epsilon was generally larger at low SRRs (<20 nmol cm-3 h-1), which could have resulted from the reduced reversibility of sulfate transport into the cell at low temperature, large energy investment in cellular adaptation strategies required for the more extreme environmental sites, or anomalous isotope effects induced by microorganisms thriving on the edges of their optimum growth conditions. Consistently small fractionation effects with an average of 12 per mil were achieved at SRR above 70 nmol cm-3h-1. This thesis shows that limited delta34S variations of 10 to 25 per mil in the earliest Archean rock record could result from microbial sulfate reduction at high SRR or under site specific environmental conditions at low SRR. This contrasts with previous studies that have cited only low ocean sulfate concentrations as an explanation for minor or absent isotope fractionation. However, interpretation is difficult as mixing between distinctive sulfur sources or abiotic fractionation processes may have overprinted the original biogenic signal in the rock record. The new data presented in this thesis should be further implemented in models studying sulfur cycling in modern and ancient geochemical settings.
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