Identifying Active Rather than Total Methanotrophs Inhabiting Surface Soil Is Essential for the Microbial Prospection of Gas Reservoirs

Author:

Xu Kewei123ORCID,Tao Cheng123,Gu Lei123,Zheng Xuying123,Ma Yuanyuan123,Yan Zhengfei4,Sun Yongge5,Cai Yuanfeng6ORCID,Jia Zhongjun67

Affiliation:

1. State Key Laboratory of Shale Oil and Gas Enrichment Mechanisms and Effective Development, SINOPEC, Beijing 100083, China

2. SINOPEC Key Laboratory of Petroleum Accumulation Mechanisms, Wuxi 214126, China

3. Wuxi Research Institute of Petroleum Geology, Research Institute of Petroleum Exploration & Production, SINOPEC, Wuxi 214126, China

4. School of Biotechnology, Jiangnan University, Wuxi 214122, China

5. Department of Earth Science, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou 310027, China

6. Institute of Soil Science, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Nanjing 210008, China

7. State Key Laboratory of Black Soils Conservation and Utilization, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Changchun 130102, China

Abstract

Methane-oxidizing bacteria (MOB) have long been recognized as an important bioindicator for oil and gas exploration. However, due to their physiological and ecological diversity, the distribution of MOB in different habitats varies widely, making it challenging to authentically reflect the abundance of active MOB in the soil above oil and gas reservoirs using conventional methods. Here, we selected the Puguang gas field of the Sichuan Basin in Southwest China as a model system to study the ecological characteristics of methanotrophs using culture-independent molecular techniques. Initially, by comparing the abundance of the pmoA genes determined by quantitative PCR (qPCR), no significant difference was found between gas well and non-gas well soils, indicating that the abundance of total MOB may not necessarily reflect the distribution of the underlying gas reservoirs. 13C-DNA stable isotope probing (DNA-SIP) in combination with high-throughput sequencing (HTS) furthermore revealed that type II methanotrophic Methylocystis was the absolutely predominant active MOB in the non-gas-field soils, whereas the niche vacated by Methylocystis was gradually filled with type I RPC-2 (rice paddy cluster-2) and Methylosarcina in the surface soils of gas reservoirs after geoscale acclimation to trace- and continuous-methane supply. The sum of the relative abundance of RPC-2 and Methylosarcina was then used as specific biotic index (BI) in the Puguang gas field. A microbial anomaly distribution map based on the BI values showed that the anomalous zones were highly consistent with geological and geophysical data, and known drilling results. Therefore, the active but not total methanotrophs successfully reflected the microseepage intensity of the underlying active hydrocarbon system, and can be used as an essential quantitative index to determine the existence and distribution of reservoirs. Our results suggest that molecular microbial techniques are powerful tools for oil and gas prospecting.

Funder

National Science Foundation of China

the research project of SINOPEC

Publisher

MDPI AG

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