Ryan,
Sulfate is omnipresent in a marine tank as SW contains, of all its dissolved salts, 7.7% sulfate by weight. Only chloride and sodium surpass it in relative abundance. Bacteria also exist at every level in even the deepest sand bed and, as we go deeper into the bed, the lower level bacteria are very good at using the slightest traces of carbon. Stuff that the aerobic heterotrophs find too difficult to hydrolyze and break down are assimilated with joy by the lower on the food chain bacteria at deeper levels. The lower level bacteria even consume the waste material excreted by their more opulent brethren. A nasty job but someone has to do it.
At the end of this ever diminishing chain of carbon consumers about the only thing left over is that goop that fuels you car and is creeping back up to $3 a gallon.
There is a tradeoff in this cycle. The upper level aerobic heterotrophs reproduce like crazy. They easily double their numbers in a few hours. The autotrophs do not have that luxury and it take them over a day to double their population. That is why it takes a week or more for ammonia to be changed to nitrate in a new tank. Obligate anaerobes take a month or so to really get into the action as they live on a minimal diet of leftovers.
Obligate anaerobes are not usually found in a properly set up DSB. The reason is that the sand shifting worms and such also brings oxygen to some degree into the bed. It may not be much but to an anaerobe it is a deadly material. By keeping the bed replenished with these sand stirrers it is unlike that even sulfate reduction will occur.
I was kidding TMZ, Tom, by mentioning a desulfinator but, in fact, that can happen in a sandbed or even mechanical denitrification system. Once nitrate is reduced and some metal oxides found in very low amounts are also relieved of their oxygen, then sulfate reduction starts to occur. It too works on specialized bacteria (there are all sorts of bacteria that can use nitrate but not so with sulfate) that reduce sulfate to hydrogen sulfide if provided with carbon to oxidize.
Back when even Paul B was a young whippersnapper.

It was thought that nitrate was harmful to marine fish and was one of the things that helped Velvet to be the plaque of the SW enthusiast. My tank back then was set up with a UGF and plastic plants and was basically a tropical fish tank using SW and with more colorful fish than anybody else had.

Even with water changes my nitrate levels hovered around 120 so I needed to figure out a way to bring it down. Hence I built my own denitrifier.
A compartmented tank with nitrogen gas purging oxygen, sugar addition and some air plates to spread the fairly expensive nitrogen evenly in the reducing section. It worked but also reduced sulfate as well (back then I tested for about everything under the sun and had a lab to accomplish that feat). Faced with hydrogen sulfide coming off the unit I added a reaeration section and that solved the problem as it purged the H<sub>2</sub>S. I figured every SW enthusiast would want one but since it was almost twice the size of my tank, and used a lot of bottled nitrogen, it never made me a millionaire.
Anyway, I digress, you don't need to incorporate any of this into your model as it would frighten even the most hardened Newbie but I thought the lecture may have some value on this forum.
Good Job! :thumbsup: