Abstract

Hydrocarbon–degrading consortia (HDC) play an important role in petroleum exploitation. However, the real composition and metabolic mechanism of HDC in the microbial enhanced oil recovery (MEOR) process remain unclear. By combining 13C–DNA stable isotope probing microcosms with metagenomics, some newly reported phyla, including Chloroflexi, Synergistetes, Thermotogae, and Planctomycetes, dominated the HDC in the oil reservoirs. In the field trials, the HDC in the aerobic-facultative-anaerobic stage of oilfields jointly promoted the MEOR process, with monthly oil increments of up to 189 tons. Pseudomonas can improve oil recovery by producing rhamnolipid in the facultative condition. Roseovarius was the novel taxa potentially oxidizing alkane and producing acetate to improve oil porosity and permeability in the aerobic condition. Ca. Bacteroidia were the new members potentially degrading hydrocarbons by fumarate addition in the anaerobic environment. Comprehensive identification of the active HDC in oil reservoirs provides a novel theoretical basis for oilfield regulatory scheme.

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