Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Disease dynamics and potential mitigation among restored and wild staghorn coral, Acropora cervicornis
View through CrossRef
The threatened status (both ecologically and legally) of Caribbean staghorn coral,
Acropora cervicornis
, has prompted rapidly expanding efforts in culture and restocking, although tissue loss diseases continue to affect populations. In this study, disease surveillance and histopathological characterization were used to compare disease dynamics and conditions in both restored and extant wild populations. Disease had devastating effects on both wild and restored populations, but dynamics were highly variable and appeared to be site-specific with no significant differences in disease prevalence between wild versus restored sites. Disease affected up to 80% of colonies at one site following a tropical storm. A subset of 20 haphazardly selected colonies at each site observed over a single field season revealed widely varying disease incidence, although not in a consistent way between restored and wild sites, and a case fatality rate of 8%. Lastly, two field mitigation techniques, (1) excision of apparently healthy branch tips from a diseased colony, and (2) placement of a band of epoxy fully enclosing the diseased margin, gave equivocal results with no significant benefit detected for either treatment compared to controls. Tissue condition of associated samples was fair to very poor; unsuccessful mitigation treatment samples had severe degeneration of mesenterial filament cnidoglandular bands. Polyp mucocytes in all samples were infected with suspect rickettsia-like organisms; no bacterial aggregates were found. Overall results do not support differing disease quality, quantity, dynamics, or health management strategies between restored and wild colonies of
A. cervicornis
in the Florida Keys.
Title: Disease dynamics and potential mitigation among restored and wild staghorn coral,
Acropora cervicornis
Description:
The threatened status (both ecologically and legally) of Caribbean staghorn coral,
Acropora cervicornis
, has prompted rapidly expanding efforts in culture and restocking, although tissue loss diseases continue to affect populations.
In this study, disease surveillance and histopathological characterization were used to compare disease dynamics and conditions in both restored and extant wild populations.
Disease had devastating effects on both wild and restored populations, but dynamics were highly variable and appeared to be site-specific with no significant differences in disease prevalence between wild versus restored sites.
Disease affected up to 80% of colonies at one site following a tropical storm.
A subset of 20 haphazardly selected colonies at each site observed over a single field season revealed widely varying disease incidence, although not in a consistent way between restored and wild sites, and a case fatality rate of 8%.
Lastly, two field mitigation techniques, (1) excision of apparently healthy branch tips from a diseased colony, and (2) placement of a band of epoxy fully enclosing the diseased margin, gave equivocal results with no significant benefit detected for either treatment compared to controls.
Tissue condition of associated samples was fair to very poor; unsuccessful mitigation treatment samples had severe degeneration of mesenterial filament cnidoglandular bands.
Polyp mucocytes in all samples were infected with suspect rickettsia-like organisms; no bacterial aggregates were found.
Overall results do not support differing disease quality, quantity, dynamics, or health management strategies between restored and wild colonies of
A.
cervicornis
in the Florida Keys.
Related Results
A window to the past: documenting the status of one of the last remaining ‘megapopulations’ of the threatened staghorn coral Acropora cervicornis in the Dominican Republic
A window to the past: documenting the status of one of the last remaining ‘megapopulations’ of the threatened staghorn coral Acropora cervicornis in the Dominican Republic
Abstract
Acropora cervicornis (staghorn coral) and Acropora palmata (elkhorn coral), once common features of shallow Caribbean reefs observed growing as large stands or thickets, a...
Nocturnal substrate association of four coral reef fish groups (parrotfishes, surgeonfishes, groupers and butterflyfishes) in relation to substrate architectural characteristics
Nocturnal substrate association of four coral reef fish groups (parrotfishes, surgeonfishes, groupers and butterflyfishes) in relation to substrate architectural characteristics
Although numerous coral reef fish species utilize substrates with high structural complexities as habitats and refuge spaces, quantitative analysis of nocturnal fish substrate asso...
SPECIES COMPOSITION AND DISTRIBUTION OF ACROPORA CORALS IN NHA TRANG BAY AND ADJACENT WATERS
SPECIES COMPOSITION AND DISTRIBUTION OF ACROPORA CORALS IN NHA TRANG BAY AND ADJACENT WATERS
Nha Trang Bay (Khanh Hoa, Vietnam) is widely recognized for its rich and diverse coral reef ecosystems, where Acropora corals play a foundational role in reef construction and ecol...
Modelling regime shifts of coral reefs to sponge reefs
Modelling regime shifts of coral reefs to sponge reefs
<p>Coral reef ecosystems have been degrading globally for decades due to global climate change and anthropogenic pressure, and corals are expected to continue declining in th...
PEMETAAN SEBARAN TERUMBU KARANG MENGGUNAKAN SISTEM INFORMASI GEOGRAFIS DI PERAIRAN ACEH UTARA
PEMETAAN SEBARAN TERUMBU KARANG MENGGUNAKAN SISTEM INFORMASI GEOGRAFIS DI PERAIRAN ACEH UTARA
This study aims to analyze the distribution of coral reef cover in North Aceh Waters using a Geographic Information System. This research was conducted from December 2025 to Januar...
Benthic foraminifera associated to cold-water coral ecosystems
Benthic foraminifera associated to cold-water coral ecosystems
Cold-water coral reef ecosystems occur worldwide and are especially developed along the European margin, from northern Norway to the Gulf of Cadiz and into the Western Mediterranea...
Controlled “out-of-season” spawning of reef-forming corals in aquaria using offset environmental profiles
Controlled “out-of-season” spawning of reef-forming corals in aquaria using offset environmental profiles
Abstract
The global climate crisis has heightened the urgency for developing interventions to enhance resilience and recovery of coral reef ecosy...
Spatial distribution and feeding substrate of butterflyfishes (family Chaetodontidae) on an Okinawan coral reef
Spatial distribution and feeding substrate of butterflyfishes (family Chaetodontidae) on an Okinawan coral reef
Coral reefs support diverse communities, and relationships among organisms within these communities are quite complex. Among the relationships, clarifying the habitat association a...

