Abstract

The response of the microbes to total petroleum hydrocarbons (TPHs) in three types of oilfield soils was researched using metagenomic analysis. The ranges of TPH concentrations in the grassland, abandoned well, working well soils were 1.16 × 102–3.50 × 102 mg/kg, 1.14 × 103–1.62 × 104 mg/kg, and 5.57 × 103–3.33 × 104 mg/kg, respectively. The highest concentration of n-alkanes and 16 PAHs were found in the working well soil of Shengli (SL) oilfield compared with those in Nanyang (NY) and Yanchang (YC) oilfields. The abandoned well soils showed a greater extent of petroleum biodegradation than the grassland and working well soils. Α-diversity indexes based on metagenomic taxonomy showed higher microbial diversity in grassland soils, whereas petroleum-degrading microbes Actinobacteria and Proteobacteria were more abundant in working and abandoned well soils. RDA demonstrated that low moisture content (MOI) in YC oilfield inhibited the accumulation of the petroleum-degrading microbes. Synergistic networks of functional genes and Spearman's correlation analysis showed that heavy petroleum contamination (over 2.10 × 104 mg/kg) negatively correlated with the abundance of the nitrogen fixation genes nifHK, however, in grassland soils, low petroleum content facilitated the accumulation of nitrogen fixation genes. A positive correlation was observed between the abundance of petroleum-degrading genes and denitrification genes (bphAa vs. nirD, todC vs. nirS, and nahB vs. nosZ), whereas a negative correlation was observed between alkB (alkane- degrading genes) and amo (ammonia oxidation), hao (nitrification). The ecotoxicity of petroleum contamination, coupled with petroleum hydrocarbons (PH) degradation competing with nitrifiers for ammonia inhibited ammonia oxidation and nitrification, whereas PH metabolism promoted the denitrification process. Moreover, positive correlations were observed between the abundance of amo gene and MOI, as well as between the abundance of the dissimilatory nitrate reduction gene nirA and clay content. Thus, improving the soil physicochemical properties is a promising approach for decreasing nitrogen loss and alleviating petroleum contamination in oilfield soils.

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