Coral Reefs: 2002 Publications
Author: Nugues,
M.M.
Title: Impact
of a coral disease outbreak on coral communities in St. Lucia: What and how
much has been lost?
Publication: Marine
Ecology Progress Series 229: 61-71, 2002.
©
Inter-Research
Notes:
In
July 1997, a coral disease called plague appeared on the coral reefs of St.
Lucia, West Indies. A survey of 6 coral species on 3 reefs in March 1998 revealed
an overall disease incidence of 11%. Montastraea faveolata and Colpophyllia
natans were the most affected species with 19% and 13% of colonies infected
respectively. Disease frequency was independent of coral density and the distribution
of the disease among 5 x 5 m plots was not clumped, suggesting that proximity
to affected colonies did not increase probability of infection. Among-colony
size variation in disease incidence and tissue mortality indicates that small
coral colonies are more likely to escape infections than large colonies, but
once infection occurs, small colonies will experience faster colony mortality.
This suggests that the effect of the disease on coral population structure
will be greater total mortality in small colonies relative to large colonies,
at least over short-time scales. At the most severely affected site, it was
estimated in March 1998 that plague had killed 6.6% of living coral during
the preceding 8 months. Despite these losses being small compared to losses
from other well-known disturbances on coral reefs, such as hurricanes, the
disease selectively impacted 2 major reef frame builders. More than 90% of
the estimated tissue loss was accounted for by Montastraea faveolata and Colpophyllia
natans combined. In addition, infected colonies continued to lose living tissue
from February 1998 to October 1998, with no new coral recruitment observed
on the substrate opened up by the disease. Of the colonies infected in February
1998, 28% still showed signs of disease in October 1998. Over the long term,
if losses are sustained at such rates, plague could cause complete mortality
in large colonies and could progressively deplete two of the most important
reef frame builders in some of the richest and most visited coral reefs of
St. Lucia.
|