Abstract

Carbon oxidation rates and pathways were determined in two sediments at latitude 751 and 771N southeast of Svalbard in the northern Barents Sea. Seasonal ice cover restricts primary production to few months a year, which determines the sedimentation rate of organic material to the seafloor. At one station, with seasonally extended ice cover, low organic carbon content and sedimentation rate combined with relatively high concentrations of Mn and Fe(III) oxides favored dissimilatory Fe and Mn reduction (98% of anaerobic carbon oxidation) over sulfate reduction in the top 12 cm of the sediment. In contrast, in a sediment that had not been ice covered for at least 12 months and with more organic carbon and a higher sedimentation rate, sulfate reduction was the most important anaerobic electronaccepting process (480% of anaerobic carbon oxidation). In the upper 3 cm, microbial Fe and sulfate reduction occurred simultaneously, and sulfate reduction dominated at 3–12 cm. Oxygen consumption rates (1.9 and 3.7 mmol m � 2 d � 1 ) and anaerobic CO2 production rates (1.3 and 6.4 mmol m � 2 d � 1 ) of both

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