American University
Browse
auislandora_84493_OBJ.pdf (358.79 kB)

Relationship between water quality, δ15N, and aspergillosis of Caribbean sea fan corals

Download (358.79 kB)
journal contribution
posted on 2023-08-05, 12:03 authored by David M. Baker, Stephen MacAvoyStephen MacAvoy, Kiho Kim

It has been hypothesized that excess nitrogen (N) contributes to coral reef decline by exacerbating the impact of disease. We tested the relationship between N concentration and the prevalence and severity of aspergillosis of the sea fan coral Gorgonia ventalina at 9 reefs along the Florida Keys Reef Tract. Quarterly water quality data, averaged over 1 and 4 yr prior to a disease sur- vey, were used to examine whether aspergillosis dynamics reflected short- or long-term N concentra- tions. A positive relationship was detected between prevalence of aspergillosis and long-term total nitrogen (TN) concentration; in contrast, disease severity was positively related to the ratio between dissolved inorganic nitrogen and total phosphate (DIN:TP) over both short- and long-terms. These results may reflect the differential influence of N on the host and pathogen. We also tested whether N isotope analysis (δ15N) of sea fan coral tissue and skeleton could be used to assess the relative expo- sure to anthropogenic N inputs and its impact on disease. There was no relationship between δ15N and aspergillosis (either prevalence or severity). Furthermore, there was no relationship between δ15N and environmental concentrations of N. It is possible that the source of N (e.g. anthropogenic) does not affect the dynamics of sea fan aspergillosis, or that the δ15N signatures were suppressed by agricultural effluents and other N sources, thus confounding our analyses with disease.

History

Publisher

Marine Ecology Progress Series

Notes

Published in: Marine Ecology Series, 2007, Vol. 343, pp. 123-130.

Handle

http://hdl.handle.net/1961/auislandora:84493

Usage metrics

    Environmental Science

    Categories

    No categories selected

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC