Infected
sea urchin on Reunion Island. Credit: Jean-Pascal Quod
A
continuing study from Tel Aviv University has found that the deadly epidemic
discovered last year, which has essentially wiped out Eilat's most abundant and
ecologically significant sea urchins, has spread across the Red Sea and into
the Indian Ocean. The alarming results were published in Current Biology.
According to the researchers, what
appeared at first to be a severe but local epidemic, has quickly spread through
the region, and now threatens to become a global pandemic.
The researchers estimate that since it
broke out in December 2022, the epidemic has annihilated most of the sea urchin
populations (of the species affected by the disease) in the Red Sea, as well as
an unknown number of sea urchins, estimated at hundreds of thousands,
worldwide.
Sea urchins are considered the 'gardeners' of coral reefs, feeding on the algae that compete with the corals for sunshine—and their disappearance can severely impact the delicate balance on coral reefs globally. The researchers note that since the discovery of the epidemic in Eilat's coral reefs, the two species of sea urchins previously most dominant in the Gulf of Eilat have vanished completely.
Dead and dying long-spine urchins in Dahab
(00:00–02:43) and in Réunion Island (02:44–02:54). Credit: Annalena Barth and
Jean-Pascal Quod.
The study was led by Dr. Omri
Bronstein from the School of Zoology and the Steinhardt Museum of Natural
History (SMNH), together with research students Lachan Roth, Gal Eviatar, Lisa
Schmidt, and May Bonomo, as well as Dr. Tamar Feldstein-Farkash from the SMNH.
Research partners throughout the region and Europe also took part in the study,
which encompassed thousands of kilometers of coral reefs.
In addition, by using
molecular-genetic tools, the research group at TAU was able to identify the
pathogen responsible for the mass mortality of sea urchins of the species
Diadema setosum in the Red Sea: a scuticociliate parasite most similar to
Philaster apodigitiformis.
The researchers explain that this
unicellular organism was also responsible for the reoccurring mass mortality of
Diadema antillarum in the Caribbeans about two years ago, following the
notorious 1983 sea urchin population collapse there which led to a catastrophic
phase shift of the coral reef.
As noted, in December 2022, Dr. Bronstein was the first researcher to identify mass mortality of sea urchins of the species Diadema setosum—the long-spined black sea urchins that were very common in the northern Gulf of Eilat, Jordan, and Sinai. Dr. Bronstein and his team also found that the epidemic was lethal for other, closely related sea urchins from the genus Echinothrix.
Sea urchin mortalities on Reunion Island. Credit: Jean-Pascal Quod
Four
healthy sea urchin species on Reunion Island. Credit: Jean-Pascal Quod
These
results suggest that the once most abundant and significant seabed herbivores
in the region are now practically gone. Thousands of sea urchins died a quick
and violent death—within two days a healthy sea urchin turns into bare
skeleton with no tissues or spines, and most were devoured by predators as they
were dying, unable to defend themselves. According to estimates, today only a
few individuals of the affected sea urchin species remain throughout the coral
reefs of the Gulf of Aqaba.
Dr. Bronstein explains that sea urchins
in general, and specifically diadematoids (the sea urchin family affected by
the disease), are considered key species essential for the healthy functioning
of coral reefs. Acting as the reef's 'gardeners,' the sea urchins feed on the
algae that compete with the corals for sunshine, and prevent them from taking
over and suffocating the corals.
According to Dr. Bronstein, the most
significant and widely studied mass mortality of sea urchins to date occurred
in 1983, when a mysterious disease spread through the Caribbeans, killing most
sea urchins of the species Diadema antillarum—relatives of Eilat's sea urchins.
Consequently, the algae spread
uncontrollably, blocking the sunlight from the corals, and the entire reef was
transformed from a coral reef into an algae field. Moreover, even though the
mass mortality event in the Caribbeans occurred 40 years ago, both the corals
and the sea urchin populations never fully recovered, with repeated mortality
events observed through the years.
The latest Caribbean outbreak in 2022 killed surviving populations and individuals from the former mortality events. This time, however, researchers had the scientific and technological tools to decipher the forensic evidence. A research group from Cornell University was able to identify the responsible pathogen, a scuticociliate parasite.
Diadema
group Zanzibar. Credit: Tel Aviv University
Dr.
Bronstein emphasizes, "This is a growing ecological crisis, threatening
the stability of coral reefs on an unprecedented scale. Apparently, the mass
mortality we identified in Eilat back in 2023 has spread along the Red Sea and
beyond—to Oman, and even as far as Reunion Island in the Indian Ocean.
"The deadly pathogen is carried by
water and can affect vast areas in a very short time. Even sea urchins raised
in seawater systems at the Interuniversity Institute for Marine Sciences in
Eilat, or at the Underwater Observatory, were infected and died, after the
pathogen got in through the recirculating seawater system.
"As noted, death is quick and
violent. For the first time, our research team was able to document all stages
of the disease—from infection to the inevitable death—with a unique video
system installed at the Interuniversity Institute for Marine Sciences in Eilat.
"Moreover, until recently, only one species of sea urchin was known to be impacted by this pathogen—the Caribbean species. Today we know that additional species are susceptible to the disease—all belonging to the same family of the most significant sea urchin herbivores on coral reefs."
The sea urchin Diadema setosum before (left) and after (right) mortality. The white skeleton is exposed following tissue disintegration and loss of spines. Credit: Tel Aviv University
The
research team. Credit: Tel Aviv University
Dr.
Bronstein adds, "In our study we also demonstrated that the epidemic is
spreading along routes of human transportation in the Red Sea. The best example
is the wharf in Nueiba in Sinai, where the ferry from the Jordanian city of
Aqaba docks. When we published our report last year, we already knew of sea
urchin mortalities in Aqaba, but had not yet identified signs of it in Sinai.
"The first spot in which we
ultimately did identify mortality in Sinai was next to this wharf in Nueiba.
Two weeks later, the epidemic had already reached Dahab, about 70km further
south. The scene underwater is almost surreal: seeing a species that was so
dominant in a certain environment simply erased in a matter of days. Thousands
of skeletons rolling on the sea bottom, crumbling and vanishing in a very short
time, so that even evidence for what has occurred is hard to find."
According to Dr. Bronstein, there is
currently no way to help infected sea urchins or vaccinate them against the disease. We must,
however, quickly establish broodstock populations of endangered species in cultivation systems disconnected from the
sea—so that in the future we will be able to reintroduce them into the natural
environment.
"Unfortunately, we cannot repair
nature, but we can certainly change our own behavior. First of all, we must
understand what caused this outbreak at this time. Is the pathogen transported
unknowingly by seacraft? Or has it always been here, erupting now due to a
change in environmental conditions? These are precisely the questions we are
working on now."
Source: Researchers identify the pathogen causing sea urchin mass mortalities in the Red Sea (phys.org)
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