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Succession in the petroleum reservoir microbiome through an oil field production lifecycle
by
Head, Ian M
, Tsesmetzis, Nicolas
, Alsop, Eric B
, Lomans, Bartholomeus P
, Vigneron, Adrien
, Kyrpides, Nikos C
in
02 PETROLEUM
/ 45/47
/ 45/77
/ 631/326/171
/ 631/326/2565/2142
/ Anaerobes
/ Anthropogenic factors
/ Bacteria - classification
/ Bacteria - genetics
/ Bacteria - isolation & purification
/ Bacteria - metabolism
/ Bacterial corrosion
/ BASIC BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
/ Bins
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Biosphere
/ Chemical analysis
/ Communities
/ Community composition
/ Corrosion
/ Earth surface
/ Ecology
/ Ecosystem
/ ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
/ Evolutionary Biology
/ Hydrocarbons
/ Hydrogen sulfide
/ Life Sciences
/ Metabolism
/ Metagenomics
/ Microbial activity
/ Microbial Ecology
/ Microbial Genetics and Genomics
/ Microbiology
/ Microbiomes
/ Microbiota
/ Microorganisms
/ Nitrate reduction
/ Nitrates - metabolism
/ North Sea
/ Offshore drilling rigs
/ Oil and gas exploration
/ Oil and gas fields
/ Oil and Gas Fields - microbiology
/ Oil and gas industry
/ Oil and gas production
/ Oil exploration
/ Oil fields
/ Organic matter
/ Original
/ original-article
/ Oxidants
/ Oxidation
/ Oxidizing agents
/ Perturbation
/ Perturbation methods
/ Petroleum
/ Petroleum - metabolism
/ Petroleum production
/ Polymerase chain reaction
/ Reservoirs
/ Seawater
/ Seawater - microbiology
/ Service life assessment
/ Sulfides
/ Sulfides - metabolism
/ Sulfur
/ Sulfur oxidation
/ Water analysis
2017
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Succession in the petroleum reservoir microbiome through an oil field production lifecycle
by
Head, Ian M
, Tsesmetzis, Nicolas
, Alsop, Eric B
, Lomans, Bartholomeus P
, Vigneron, Adrien
, Kyrpides, Nikos C
in
02 PETROLEUM
/ 45/47
/ 45/77
/ 631/326/171
/ 631/326/2565/2142
/ Anaerobes
/ Anthropogenic factors
/ Bacteria - classification
/ Bacteria - genetics
/ Bacteria - isolation & purification
/ Bacteria - metabolism
/ Bacterial corrosion
/ BASIC BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
/ Bins
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Biosphere
/ Chemical analysis
/ Communities
/ Community composition
/ Corrosion
/ Earth surface
/ Ecology
/ Ecosystem
/ ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
/ Evolutionary Biology
/ Hydrocarbons
/ Hydrogen sulfide
/ Life Sciences
/ Metabolism
/ Metagenomics
/ Microbial activity
/ Microbial Ecology
/ Microbial Genetics and Genomics
/ Microbiology
/ Microbiomes
/ Microbiota
/ Microorganisms
/ Nitrate reduction
/ Nitrates - metabolism
/ North Sea
/ Offshore drilling rigs
/ Oil and gas exploration
/ Oil and gas fields
/ Oil and Gas Fields - microbiology
/ Oil and gas industry
/ Oil and gas production
/ Oil exploration
/ Oil fields
/ Organic matter
/ Original
/ original-article
/ Oxidants
/ Oxidation
/ Oxidizing agents
/ Perturbation
/ Perturbation methods
/ Petroleum
/ Petroleum - metabolism
/ Petroleum production
/ Polymerase chain reaction
/ Reservoirs
/ Seawater
/ Seawater - microbiology
/ Service life assessment
/ Sulfides
/ Sulfides - metabolism
/ Sulfur
/ Sulfur oxidation
/ Water analysis
2017
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Succession in the petroleum reservoir microbiome through an oil field production lifecycle
by
Head, Ian M
, Tsesmetzis, Nicolas
, Alsop, Eric B
, Lomans, Bartholomeus P
, Vigneron, Adrien
, Kyrpides, Nikos C
in
02 PETROLEUM
/ 45/47
/ 45/77
/ 631/326/171
/ 631/326/2565/2142
/ Anaerobes
/ Anthropogenic factors
/ Bacteria - classification
/ Bacteria - genetics
/ Bacteria - isolation & purification
/ Bacteria - metabolism
/ Bacterial corrosion
/ BASIC BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
/ Bins
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Biosphere
/ Chemical analysis
/ Communities
/ Community composition
/ Corrosion
/ Earth surface
/ Ecology
/ Ecosystem
/ ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
/ Evolutionary Biology
/ Hydrocarbons
/ Hydrogen sulfide
/ Life Sciences
/ Metabolism
/ Metagenomics
/ Microbial activity
/ Microbial Ecology
/ Microbial Genetics and Genomics
/ Microbiology
/ Microbiomes
/ Microbiota
/ Microorganisms
/ Nitrate reduction
/ Nitrates - metabolism
/ North Sea
/ Offshore drilling rigs
/ Oil and gas exploration
/ Oil and gas fields
/ Oil and Gas Fields - microbiology
/ Oil and gas industry
/ Oil and gas production
/ Oil exploration
/ Oil fields
/ Organic matter
/ Original
/ original-article
/ Oxidants
/ Oxidation
/ Oxidizing agents
/ Perturbation
/ Perturbation methods
/ Petroleum
/ Petroleum - metabolism
/ Petroleum production
/ Polymerase chain reaction
/ Reservoirs
/ Seawater
/ Seawater - microbiology
/ Service life assessment
/ Sulfides
/ Sulfides - metabolism
/ Sulfur
/ Sulfur oxidation
/ Water analysis
2017
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Succession in the petroleum reservoir microbiome through an oil field production lifecycle
Journal Article
Succession in the petroleum reservoir microbiome through an oil field production lifecycle
2017
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Overview
Subsurface petroleum reservoirs are an important component of the deep biosphere where indigenous microorganisms live under extreme conditions and in isolation from the Earth’s surface for millions of years. However, unlike the bulk of the deep biosphere, the petroleum reservoir deep biosphere is subject to extreme anthropogenic perturbation, with the introduction of new electron acceptors, donors and exogenous microbes during oil exploration and production. Despite the fundamental and practical significance of this perturbation, there has never been a systematic evaluation of the ecological changes that occur over the production lifetime of an active offshore petroleum production system. Analysis of the entire Halfdan oil field in the North Sea (32 producing wells in production for 1–15 years) using quantitative PCR, multigenic sequencing, comparative metagenomic and genomic bins reconstruction revealed systematic shifts in microbial community composition and metabolic potential, as well as changing ecological strategies in response to anthropogenic perturbation of the oil field ecosystem, related to length of time in production. The microbial communities were initially dominated by slow growing anaerobes such as members of the
Thermotogales
and
Clostridiales
adapted to living on hydrocarbons and complex refractory organic matter. However, as seawater and nitrate injection (used for secondary oil production) delivered oxidants, the microbial community composition progressively changed to fast growing opportunists such as members of the
Deferribacteres
,
Delta-
,
Epsilon
- and
Gammaproteobacteria
, with energetically more favorable metabolism (for example, nitrate reduction, H
2
S, sulfide and sulfur oxidation). This perturbation has profound consequences for understanding the microbial ecology of the system and is of considerable practical importance as it promotes detrimental processes such as reservoir souring and metal corrosion. These findings provide a new conceptual framework for understanding the petroleum reservoir biosphere and have consequences for developing strategies to manage microbiological problems in the oil industry.
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK,Oxford University Press,Nature Publishing Group
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