4.5 Article

The roles of temperature and light in black band disease (BBD) progression on corals of the genus Diploria in Bermuda

期刊

JOURNAL OF INVERTEBRATE PATHOLOGY
卷 106, 期 3, 页码 366-370

出版社

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.jip.2010.12.012

关键词

Black band disease (BBD); Bermuda; Diploria; Resistance; Temperature; Irradiance

类别

资金

  1. Sydney L. Wright Fellowship
  2. Samuel Riker Fellowship
  3. Environmental Protection Agency [MA-91697601]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

On Bermuda reefs the brain coral Diploria labyrinthiformis is rarely documented with black band disease (BBD), while BBD-affected colonies of Diploria strigosa are common. D. labyrinthiformis on these reefs may be more resistant to BBD or less affected by prevailing environmental conditions that potentially diminish host defenses. To determine whether light and/or temperature influence BBD differently on these two species, infection experiments were conducted under the following experimental treatments: (1) 26 degrees C, ambient light; (2) 30 degrees C, ambient light; (3) 30 degrees C, low light; and (4) 30 degrees C, high light. A digital photograph of the affected area of each coral was taken each day for 7 days and analyzed with ImageJ image processing software. The final affected area was not significantly different between species in any of the four treatments. BBD lesions were smaller on both species infected under ambient light at 26 degrees C versus 30 degrees C. Low light at 30 degrees C significantly reduced the lesion size on both species when compared to colonies infected at the same temperature under ambient light. Under high light at 30 degrees C, BBD lesions were larger on colonies of D. strigosa and smaller on colonies of D. labyrinthiformis when compared to colonies infected under ambient light at the same temperature. The responses of both species suggests that BBD progression on both D. strigosa and D. labyrinthiformis is similarly influenced by a combination of light and temperature and that other factors present before infections become established likely contribute to the difference in BBD prevalence in Bermuda. (C) 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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