Date: February 16, 2016
Source: Cornell University
Two new Cornell University
studies show how diverse marine organisms are susceptible to diseases made
worse by warming oceans.
The first study warns that warm sea
temperatures in 2015 may increase the levels of epizootic shell disease in
American lobster in the northern Gulf of Maine
in 2016. The second provides the first evidence linking warmer ocean
temperatures with a West Coast epidemic of sea star wasting disease that has
infected more than 20 species and devastated populations since 2013. Both were
published Feb. 15 as part of a marine disease-themed special issue of the
journal Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B.
The first paper, "Improving marine
disease surveillance through sea temperature monitoring, outlooks and
projections," summarizes the cases where there are known links between
disease outbreaks and temperature, including diseases that affect corals,
turtles, lobsters, bivalves, starfish and eelgrasses. The paper proposes best
practices to develop models that link disease risk with temperature. Increased
disease threatens a diverse range of marine populations, including economically
important species like the Maine lobster which
could put at risk the New England fishing
industry.
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