| Literature DB >> 17488183 |
John F Bruno1, Elizabeth R Selig, Kenneth S Casey, Cathie A Page, Bette L Willis, C Drew Harvell, Hugh Sweatman, Amy M Melendy.
Abstract
Very little is known about how environmental changes such as increasing temperature affect disease dynamics in the ocean, especially at large spatial scales. We asked whether the frequency of warm temperature anomalies is positively related to the frequency of coral disease across 1,500 km of Australia's Great Barrier Reef. We used a new high-resolution satellite dataset of ocean temperature and 6 y of coral disease and coral cover data from annual surveys of 48 reefs to answer this question. We found a highly significant relationship between the frequencies of warm temperature anomalies and of white syndrome, an emergent disease, or potentially, a group of diseases, of Pacific reef-building corals. The effect of temperature was highly dependent on coral cover because white syndrome outbreaks followed warm years, but only on high (>50%) cover reefs, suggesting an important role of host density as a threshold for outbreaks. Our results indicate that the frequency of temperature anomalies, which is predicted to increase in most tropical oceans, can increase the susceptibility of corals to disease, leading to outbreaks where corals are abundant.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17488183 PMCID: PMC1865563 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.0050124
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Biol ISSN: 1544-9173 Impact factor: 8.029
Figure 1Study Sites and Disease Conditions during the Peak of White Syndrome Frequency in 2002
(A) Frequency of white syndrome cases from March 2002 to March 2003; (B) bleaching intensity for scleractinian coral in March 2002 (modified from Berkelmans et al., 2004 [73]); and (C) WSSTAs in 2002.
Observed Number of White Syndrome Cases
Coefficient Estimates
Predicted Number of White Syndrome Cases
Figure 2Relationship between Coral Cover and Thermal Stress
(A and B) Relationships between thermal stress (number of WSSTAs) and total scleractinian coral cover during the two warmest summers of the study. Dashed line represents the empirical cover threshold of 50% that is generally required for high white syndrome frequency.
(C) Relationship of thermal stress between the summers of 1998/1999 and 2002/2003 at 48 reefs on the GBR.
Figure 3Predicted Effects of Environmental Stress on Disease Severity
Conceptual model of potential effects of environmental stress (magnitude or frequency) on the probability or severity (e.g., prevalence or impacts on host populations) of disease outbreaks. The model includes three possible scenarios: (A) the null model of no effect, (B) a positive, linear effect of stress such as when host density is unrelated to incidence and when the pathogen is not negatively affected by the stress, and (C) a parabolic stress effect.