Scientists are struck by how different terrestrial epidemiology is from that in marine ecosystems, a crucial difference being the more rapid spread of diseases in the ocean due to the presumed absence of barriers to waterborne dispersal. Yet, the movement of pathogens in the sea and its importance to disease dynamics in marine metapopulations is virtually unstudied. Marine pathogens do spread among distant host populations, as demonstrated by dramatic epizootics, but is this common or demographically relevant? Nearly all studies of marine diseases treat such events as transitory, focusing instead on local disease dynamics. This approach suggests either that small-scale phenomena normally trump the influence of large-scale pathogen connectivity or, alternatively, that the dispersal of marine pathogens by highly motile adults or free-living waterborne pathogens is simply too intractable for empirical investigation. Yet, there is another perhaps unappreciated mechanism – dispersal by infected larvae. Most marine animals have life histories that include planktonic larvae, many of which are highly dispersive. If infected by pathogens, these “larval vectors” would provide an efficient mechanism for distributing pathogens at high concentrations directly into habitats where hosts dwell. More so than passive, waterborne pathogens that are subject to rapid dilution and have no means of targeting distant hosts.
We have evidence that long-distance pathogen dispersal in the sea via infected meroplanktonic larvae may be possible. The pathogen in question is an often lethal, pathogenic virus (PaV1; Panulirus argus virus 1) that infects the Caribbean spiny lobster, Panulirus argus – a species broadly distributed throughout the Caribbean where it supports the most valuable fishery in the region. We described the PaV1 virus in 1999 and since then have studied its pathology, epidemiology, transmission, and effects on juvenile lobster populations in the Florida Keys. Like others, our focus has been on local pathogen-host dynamics, but PaV1 infections in lobsters are now confirmed in distant areas of the Caribbean (Belize, Mexico, St. Croix) in regions that are demographically linked only by dispersing larvae that spend >6 mos. in the open ocean. We recently discovered that many lobster postlarvae recruiting to coastal nurseries in Florida are infected with PaV1, providing novel evidence for pathogen connectivity among distant host populations.
Focusing on the spiny lobster-PaV1 virus association as a case study, we propose an ambitious program of laboratory, field, and modeling research whose broader implications will better our understanding of the importance of dispersal by infectious agents on the spread and maintenance of disease in marine populations. The project builds upon data and techniques developed with prior NSF sponsorship, and brings together partners in developing Caribbean nations with a multidisciplinary group of scientists with long-standing research programs in larval biology, biophysical and ecological modeling, crustacean biology, molecular biology, and the study of marine diseases.
Dataset | Latest Version Date | Current State |
---|---|---|
Caribbean wide survey of PaV1 prevalence in adult lobsters in lobster fishing grounds from 2006-2007 and 2010-2011 (Lobster disease connectivity project) | 2021-05-04 | Final no updates expected |
Data describing Tethered PaV1 infected juvenile lobsters introduced to occupied wild dens in the south-central Florida Bay (Lobster disease connectivity project) | 2015-04-13 | Final no updates expected |
Data describing Long-term PaV1 lobster surveys in the south-central Florida Bay from 1999-2014 (Lobster disease connectivity project) | 2015-04-13 | Final no updates expected |
Lead Principal Investigator: Mark Butler
Old Dominion University (ODU)
Principal Investigator: Donald Behringer
University of Florida (UF-SFRC)
Principal Investigator: Claire B. Paris-Limouzy
University of Miami Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science (UM-RSMAS)
Principal Investigator: Jeffery Shields
Virginia Institute of Marine Science (VIMS)