Disease: Difference between revisions

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* Pathogen unknown but leaves behind brittle coral skeleton
* Pathogen unknown but leaves behind brittle coral skeleton
* One of the only diseases known to cause major changes in structural composition of reefs
* One of the only diseases known to cause major changes in structural composition of reefs
* After tissue peels away skeleton is weakened by bioerosion<span class="floatright" style="height:216;width:288;">http://cdn.c.photoshelter.com/img-get/I0000gsabEkdmNIM/s/750/750/MPOFL294.jpg</span>
* After tissue peels away skeleton is weakened by bioerosion<span class="floatright" style="height:216;width:288;">http://www.advancedaquarist.com/2002/6/corals_album/WP_wild.jpg</span>
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'''White Plague Disease''' <br />
'''White Plague Disease''' <br />

Revision as of 15:04, 26 February 2013

Coral Disease

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Dark Spots Disease (in depth)

  • Relevant in the Florida Keys and wider Caribbean
  • Affected areas are dark purple, gray or brown
  • circular or irregular in shape scattered on surface of a colony or at colony's margin
  • discolored area increases in size and radiates outward as affected area dies
  • Darkened polyps are often depressed and appear smaller in size
  • Popular on S. siderea (massive starlet coral), blushing star coral, and M. annularis


Black Band Disease

  • Characterized by blackish concentric/crescent-shaped band (given by photosynthetic pigment of the dominant cyanobacteria)
  • Consumes live coral tissue as it passes over colony surface
  • Caused primarily by cyanobacteria along with sulfide-oxidizing and sulfur-reducing bacteria
  • Most commonly affects massive reef-building corals all over the world
  • Leaves behind bleached coral


Red band disease

  • Narrow bands of filamentous cyanobacteria
  • First type, RBD-1, closely resembles BBD except that bands are maroon in color
  • Second type, RBD-2, has cyanobacterial filaments spread like a net over colony's surface
  • Microbial mat is easily dislodged from surface of coral tissue
  • Affects massive and plating stony corals, and also sea fans throughout the wider Caribbean
  • Leaves behind bleached coral


White Band Disease

  • Extensive occurrence in the Caribbean
  • Effects Elkhorn and Staghorn Coral
  • Tissue Peels off the coral starting at the base causing thick white bands of bleached coral
  • Presumed bacterial infection that affects the Genus Acropora
  • Pathogen unknown but leaves behind brittle coral skeleton
  • One of the only diseases known to cause major changes in structural composition of reefs
  • After tissue peels away skeleton is weakened by bioerosionWP_wild.jpg


White Plague Disease


Yellow Blotch Disease

  • Occurs in the Florida Keys and Caribbean
  • Sections of corals become yellowed and translucent
  • Cause unknown Starcoralwithlesions457x400Kellogg.jpg
  • Disease spreads outward and the tissue in the center dies
  • Mostly affects large boulder star corals
  • Tissue left behind the band are usually covered in coralline algae


References
“Major Reef-building Coral Diseases.” CoRIS - Coral Reef Information System. NOAA, 01-17-13. Web. 2-26-13. <http://coris.noaa.gov/about/diseases/#red band>.
Gochfield, Deborah, Julie Olson, and Marc Slattery. “Colony Versus Population Variation in Susceptibility and Resistance to Dark Spot Syndrome in the Caribbean Coral Siderastrea Siderea.” Diseases of Aquatic Organisms 69 (2006): 53–65. Inter-Research. Web. 02-26-13. <http://www.int-res.com/abstracts/dao/v69/n1/>.
Gil-Agudelo, D.L. and J. Garzón-Ferreira 2001. Spatial and seasonal variation of dark spots disease in coral communities of the Santa Marta area (Columbian Caribbean). Bull Mar. Sci. 69:619-630
Green, E. and A. W. Bruckner. 2000. The significance of coral disease epizootiology for coral reef conservation. Biological Conservation 96:347-361.

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