Matthew Q. Lucas, Denis L. Collazo Roman, Miguel A. Mercado, Emma J. Fain, Daniel A. Toledo-Rodríguez, Ernesto Weil
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Stony coral tissue loss disease (SCTLD) is a highly contagious disease, causing mass coral mortalities in the Atlantic/Caribbean since 2014. In Puerto Rico, SCTLD was first reported in 2019 off the east coast, spreading to the north-central region by early February 2021. Benthic surveys were conducted at Cueva del Indio (CI) and Peñón de Mera (PM) off Arecibo to (1) quantify coral species-specific SCTLD prevalence using four 10 × 1-m2 belt transects and (2) acquire time-series photo and video surveys to illustrate the impact of SCTLD, to evaluate coral species-specific susceptibilities, and estimate the timing of onset in Arecibo. A total of 650 corals in six species (Pseudodiploria strigosa, P. clivosa, Montastraea cavernosa, Siderastrea siderea, Orbicella annularis, Porites astreoides) were recorded inside the belt transects at both sites. SCTLD prevalence varied between 54% (P. strigosa) and 35.5% (M. cavernosa) at CI, and between 87.5% (S. siderea) and 25% (O. faveolata) at PM. Photo/video surveys revealed that SCTLD caused partial mortality in 11 species and full mortality in P. strigosa, P. clivosa, S. siderea, M. cavernosa, and Dendrogyra cylindrus. The results are discussed in view of prior research and contribute to understanding the spread and impact of SCTLD around Puerto Rico, which can be applied to predict its spread to other regions in the Caribbean.
期刊介绍:
Marine Biodiversity is a peer-reviewed international journal devoted to all aspects of biodiversity research on marine ecosystems. The journal is a relaunch of the well-known Senckenbergiana maritima" and covers research at gene, species and ecosystem level that focuses on describing the actors (genes and species), the patterns (gradients and distributions) and understanding of the processes responsible for the regulation and maintenance of diversity in marine systems. Also included are the study of species interactions (symbioses, parasitism, etc.) and the role of species in structuring marine ecosystem functioning.
Marine Biodiversity offers articles in the category original paper, short note, Oceanarium and review article. It forms a platform for marine biodiversity researchers from all over the world for the exchange of new information and discussions on concepts and exciting discoveries.
- Covers research in all aspects of biodiversity in marine ecosystems
- Describes the actors, the patterns and the processes responsible for diversity
- Offers peer-reviewed original papers, short communications, review articles and news (Oceanarium)
- No page charges