The sediment-water interface is an important site for material exchange in marine systems and harbor unique microbial habitats. The flux of nutrients, metals, and greenhouse gases at this interface may be severely dampened by the activity of microorganisms and abiotic redox processes, leading to the “benthic filter” concept. In this study, we investigate the spatial variability, mechanisms and quantitative importance of a microbially-dominated benthic filter for dissolved sulfide in the Eastern Gotland Basin (Baltic Sea) that is located along a dynamic redox gradient between 65 and 173 m water depth. In August-September 2013, high resolution (0.25 mm minimum) vertical microprofiles of redox-sensitive species were measured in surface sedimen...
Filamentous sulfide oxidizing cable bacteria are capable of linking the oxidation of free sulfide in...
Oxygen depletion in coastal waters may lead to release of toxic sulfide from sediments. Cable bacter...
Three sediment stations in Himmerfjärden estuary (Baltic Sea, Sweden) were sampled in May 2009 and J...
The sediment-water interface is an important site for material exchange in marine systems and harbor...
Sulfur cycling in marine sediments undergoes dramatic changes with changing redox conditions of the ...
Suboxic waters and sediments are complex hotspots of nutrient recycling, metal mobilizat...
The Baltic Sea is the largest brackish inland sea in the world with the salinity gradient decrease f...
The ecological niche of nitrate-storing Beggiatoa, and their contribution to the removal of sulfide ...
AbstractFilamentous sulfide oxidizing cable bacteria are capable of linking the oxidation of free su...
Long-term experimental studies suggest that, under transient anoxic conditions, redox fronts within ...
The biogeochemistry of the sulfur cycle in a ca. 5-m-long sediment core from the eastern slope (221 ...
The Baltic Sea is characterized by the largest area of hypoxic (oxygen <2 mg/L) bottom waters in the...
Enhanced release of alkalinity from the seafloor, principally driven by anaerobic degradation of org...
Oxygen depletion in coastal waters may lead to release of toxic sulfide from sediments. Cable bacter...
Microbial dissimilatory sulfate reduction to sulfide is a predominant terminal pathway of organic ma...
Filamentous sulfide oxidizing cable bacteria are capable of linking the oxidation of free sulfide in...
Oxygen depletion in coastal waters may lead to release of toxic sulfide from sediments. Cable bacter...
Three sediment stations in Himmerfjärden estuary (Baltic Sea, Sweden) were sampled in May 2009 and J...
The sediment-water interface is an important site for material exchange in marine systems and harbor...
Sulfur cycling in marine sediments undergoes dramatic changes with changing redox conditions of the ...
Suboxic waters and sediments are complex hotspots of nutrient recycling, metal mobilizat...
The Baltic Sea is the largest brackish inland sea in the world with the salinity gradient decrease f...
The ecological niche of nitrate-storing Beggiatoa, and their contribution to the removal of sulfide ...
AbstractFilamentous sulfide oxidizing cable bacteria are capable of linking the oxidation of free su...
Long-term experimental studies suggest that, under transient anoxic conditions, redox fronts within ...
The biogeochemistry of the sulfur cycle in a ca. 5-m-long sediment core from the eastern slope (221 ...
The Baltic Sea is characterized by the largest area of hypoxic (oxygen <2 mg/L) bottom waters in the...
Enhanced release of alkalinity from the seafloor, principally driven by anaerobic degradation of org...
Oxygen depletion in coastal waters may lead to release of toxic sulfide from sediments. Cable bacter...
Microbial dissimilatory sulfate reduction to sulfide is a predominant terminal pathway of organic ma...
Filamentous sulfide oxidizing cable bacteria are capable of linking the oxidation of free sulfide in...
Oxygen depletion in coastal waters may lead to release of toxic sulfide from sediments. Cable bacter...
Three sediment stations in Himmerfjärden estuary (Baltic Sea, Sweden) were sampled in May 2009 and J...