Abstract

Mercury/gold amalgam and bismuth film electrodes (BiFEs) were used to make the first centimeter-scale measurements of redox species in benthic pore waters of prairie pothole wetlands across a hydrologic gradient. Sulfide in pore waters increased across this system from negligible sulfide in hydrologically up-gradient recharge wetlands to thousands of micromolar in down-gradient discharge wetlands. Field measurements of sulfides using the BiFE were tested against an established colorimetric assay. Sulfide measured with the BiFE agreed well with colorimetric measurements but is not subject to analytical artifacts associated with methods needed to extract the pore waters. Use of Hg/Au and BiFE electrodes should allow for rapid in situ detection of redox active species, especially sulfide concentrations of >500 μM, in pore waters over seasonal to decadal time scales. Such measurements are needed to understand important biogeochemical and environmental processes such as carbon cycling and contaminant attenuati...

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