Stony coral tissue loss disease decimated Caribbean coral populations and reshaped reef functionality

Author:

Alvarez-Filip LorenzoORCID,González-Barrios F. Javier,Pérez-Cervantes Esmeralda,Molina-Hernández Ana,Estrada-Saldívar Nuria

Abstract

AbstractDiseases are major drivers of the deterioration of coral reefs and are linked to major declines in coral abundance, reef functionality, and reef-related ecosystems services. An outbreak of a new disease is currently rampaging through the populations of the remaining reef-building corals across the Caribbean region. The outbreak was first reported in Florida in 2014 and reached the northern Mesoamerican Reef by summer 2018, where it spread across the ~450-km reef system in only a few months. Rapid spread was generalized across all sites and mortality rates ranged from 94% to <10% among the 21 afflicted coral species. Most species of the family Meandrinadae (maze corals) and subfamily Faviinae (brain corals) sustained losses >50%. This single event further modified the coral communities across the region by increasing the relative dominance of weedy corals and reducing reef functionality, both in terms of functional diversity and calcium carbonate production. This emergent disease is likely to become the most lethal disturbance ever recorded in the Caribbean, and it will likely result in the onset of a new functional regime where key reef-building and complex branching acroporids, an apparently unaffected genus that underwent severe population declines decades ago and retained low population levels, will once again become conspicuous structural features in reef systems with yet even lower levels of physical functionality.

Funder

Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnología

National Autonomous University of Mexico | Dirección General de Asuntos del Personal Académico, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México

Office of the Royal Society

Comisión Nacional de Áreas Naturales Protegidas of Mexico

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,Medicine (miscellaneous)

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