MELBOURNE, Florida -- Marine
diseases are killing coral populations all over the world, threatening
the livelihoods of millions of people who depend on reefs for food and
protection from storms, according to a news release from Florida Institute of Technology. Are these diseases new and unprecedented
infections, or do they erupt
from the stresses of environmental change?
Florida Institute of Technology biologist Robert van Woesik and his
former student Erinn Muller—now a researcher at the Mote Marine Lab in
Sarasota, Florida—used a mapping technique to examine disease clustering
and determine what might have caused the recent
increase of coral diseases in the Caribbean. Their results appear in
the October 9, 2012 issue of
Global Change Biology.
Public health officials have been mapping diseases since the first
outbreak of cholera in London in 1854. Mapping provides clues about the
origin of diseases and how rapidly diseases can spread. According to
Muller, "When diseases cluster they are usually
contagious and are spreading rapidly. When they don't cluster,
environmental stress is usually the cause."
Muller and van Woesik mapped the clustering of three coral diseases
in the Caribbean and concluded that they are stress-related rather than
contagious.
"These coral diseases in the Caribbean are likely caused by
stress,” said van Woesik, “and that stress
is the warming seas that are the result of climate change.” The
researchers suspect the corals’ immune systems are compromised by
increasing water temperatures, making them more susceptible to
infection.
"We more easily catch a cold when we are stressed, and corals are
likewise responding to stress by getting sick," said van Woesik. "The
ocean will continue to warm, increasing the likelihood of coral
diseases."
Founded at the dawn of the Space Race in 1958, Florida Tech is the
only independent, technological university in the Southeast. The
university has been named a Barron's Guide “Best Buy” in College
Education, designated a Tier One Best National University
in U.S. News & World Report, and is one of just nine schools in
Florida lauded by the 2012 Fiske Guide to Colleges and recognized by
Bloomberg Businessweek as the best college for return on investment in
Florida. A recent survey by PayScale.com ranks Florida
Tech as the top university in Florida for salary potential. The
university offers undergraduate, graduate and doctoral programs. Fields
of study include science, engineering, aeronautics, business,
humanities, mathematics, psychology, communication and education.
Additional information is available online at www.fit.edu.
No comments:
Post a Comment