Results/Conclusions Wetland plant tissue sulfur correlations with porewater sulfate and sulfide were highly dependent on species identity, while wetland plant tissue phosphorus correlations with porewater sulfate and sulfide were more uniform across species. More specifically, tissue sulfur in E. maculatum shoots was highly positively correlated with porewater sulfate (R2=0.86), while tissue sulfur in S. patula and T. latifolia was not significantly related to porewater sulfate, suggesting that E. maculatum has limited capacity to regulate sulfur uptake. Porewater sulfide was significantly positively correlated with plant root phosphorus (R2=0.38), but contrary to expectations porewater sulfide was not significantly correlated with plant shoot phosphorus. The increase in root tissue phosphorus for all three species with increasing porewater sulfide is consistent with the expectation that these species would be phosphorus limited and that they would respond to the indirect mobilization of iron-bound phosphorus by sulfide. More work is needed to determine the relative importance of porewater sulfate and sulfide in shaping the spatial distribution of plant species in calcareous rich fens.