Abstract

Abstract Methylated amines and sulfides are ubiquitous organic nitrogen and sulfur compounds in the marine environment and could serve as important energy substrates to methanogens inhabiting anoxic sediments. However, their abundance and isotopic values remain largely unconstrained in marine sediments. In this study, we investigated the distribution of trimethylamine (TMA), dimethylsulfide (DMS) and dimethylsulfoniopropionate (DMSP) in Aarhus Bay, Denmark and provided the first report for their stable carbon isotopic composition. Simultaneous measurement of those two compounds in small volumes of pore waters and sediments was accomplished with gas chromatography in combination with either a purge and trap system for quantification or a headspace method for carbon isotopic analysis. TMA in the solid phase (exchangeable pool, 0.3–6.6 μmol kg −1 wet sediment; base-extractable pool, 2–18 μmol kg −1 ) was much more abundant than the dissolved pool ( −1 ) than the dissolved pool of DMS(P)d in the pore water (including DMS and dissolved DMSP; 1–12 nM). TMA and DMS(P) contents in the solid phase peaked in the surface sediment, consistent with their phytodetrital origin. TMA was more 13 C-depleted than DMS(P) (TMA: −36.4‰ to −39.2‰; DMS: −18.6‰ to −23.4‰), presumably due to different biological or biosynthetic origins of the respective methyl groups. Both compounds showed a downcore decrease in their solid-phase concentration, a feature that was attributed to microbial degradation, but progressive enrichment in 13 C (up to 4‰) with depth was observed only for DMS(P). The considerable pool size of TMA and DMS(P) outlined in this study and geochemical evidence of their degradability suggested these two compounds could be potentially important substrates for methane production in sulfate-reducing environments.

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