4.2 Article

Prokaryotic community diversity during bioremediation of crude oil contaminated oilfield soil: effects of hydrocarbon concentration and salinity

Journal

BRAZILIAN JOURNAL OF MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 52, Issue 2, Pages 787-800

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s42770-021-00476-5

Keywords

Biodegradation; Microbial ecology; Hydrocarbonoclastic prokaryotes; Community structure; Hydrocarbon mineralization

Categories

Funding

  1. National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Cientifico e Tecnologico - CNPq)

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This study evaluated the impacts of crude oil and hypersaline water on the prokaryote community structure and biodegradation activity in soil, showing that increasing salinity and hydrocarbon concentration have negative effects on soil biological populations and biodegradation processes. Additional research is needed to develop specific bioremediation strategies for soils contaminated by mixtures of crude oil and hypersaline produced water.
Crude oil extracted from oilfield reservoirs brings together hypersaline produced water. Failure in pipelines transporting this mixture causes contamination of the soil with oil and hypersaline water. Soil salinization is harmful to biological populations, impairing the biodegradation of contaminants. We simulated the contamination of a soil from an oilfield with produced water containing different concentrations of NaCl and crude oil, in order to evaluate the effect of salinity and hydrocarbon concentration on prokaryote community structure and biodegradation activity. Microcosms were incubated in CO2-measuring respirometer. After the incubation, residual aliphatic hydrocarbons were quantified and were performed 16S rRNA gene sequencing. An increase in CO2 emission and hydrocarbon biodegradation was observed with increasing oil concentration up to 100 g kg(-1). Alpha diversity decreased in oil-contaminated soils with an increase in the relative abundance of Actinobacteria and reduction of Bacteroidetes with increasing oil concentration. In the NaCl-contaminated soils, alpha diversity, CO2 emission, and hydrocarbon biodegradation decreased with increasing NaCl concentration. There was an increase in the relative abundance of Firmicutes and Proteobacteria and a reduction of Actinobacteria with increasing salt concentration. Our results highlight the need to adopt specific bioremediation strategies in soils impacted by mixtures of crude oil and hypersaline produced water.

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