Patterns of coral disease across the Hawaiian archipelago: relating disease to environment
Autor: | Evelyn F. Cox, Jean C. Kenyon, Gareth J. Williams, Erik C. Franklin, Thierry M. Work, Steve L. Coles, Greta S. Aeby |
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Rok vydání: | 2011 |
Předmět: |
Coral
Population Porites lcsh:Medicine Marine Biology Montipora Hawaii Marine Conservation Anthozoa Acropora Animals Humans lcsh:Science education Reef Biology Population Density education.field_of_study geography Multidisciplinary geography.geographical_feature_category biology Ecology Geography lcsh:R fungi technology industry and agriculture Marine Ecology Coral reef social sciences biology.organism_classification Corals population characteristics lcsh:Q geographic locations Coastal Ecology Environmental Monitoring Research Article |
Zdroj: | PLoS ONE PLoS ONE, Vol 6, Iss 5, p e20370 (2011) |
ISSN: | 1932-6203 |
Popis: | In Hawaii, coral reefs occur across a gradient of biological (host abundance), climatic (sea surface temperature anomalies) and anthropogenic conditions from the human-impacted reefs of the main Hawaiian Islands (MHI) to the pristine reefs of the northwestern Hawaiian Islands (NWHI). Coral disease surveys were conducted at 142 sites from across the Archipelago and disease patterns examined. Twelve diseases were recorded from three coral genera (Porites, Montipora, Acropora) with Porites having the highest prevalence. Porites growth anomalies (PorGAs) were significantly more prevalent within and indicative of reefs in the MHI and Porites trematodiasis (PorTrm) was significantly more prevalent within and indicative of reefs in the NWHI. Porites tissue loss syndrome (PorTLS) was also important in driving regional differences but that relationship was less clear. These results highlight the importance of understanding disease ecology when interpreting patterns of disease occurrence. PorTrm is caused by a parasitic flatworm that utilizes multiple hosts during its life cycle (fish, mollusk and coral). All three hosts must be present for the disease to occur and higher host abundance leads to higher disease prevalence. Thus, a high prevalence of PorTrm on Hawaiian reefs would be an indicator of a healthy coral reef ecosystem. In contrast, the high occurrence of PorGAs within the MHI suggests that PorGAs are related, directly or indirectly, to some environmental co-factor associated with increased human population sizes. Focusing on the three indicator diseases (PorGAs, PorTrm, PorTLS) we used statistical modeling to examine the underlying associations between disease prevalence and 14 different predictor variables (biotic and abiotic). All three diseases showed positive associations with host abundance and negative associations with thermal stress. The association with human population density differed among disease states with PorGAs showing a positive and PorTrm showing a negative association, but no significant explanatory power was offered for PorTLS. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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