Stop Kissing the Coral!!!!

We know some of you have trouble getting dates, but....

http://www.cosmosmagazine.com/news/5473/coral-reefs-have-herpes

Long blamed on anthropogenic global warming, coral bleaching events are now being traced to viral pathogens, specifically a form of the herpes virus. I guess this is what they mean when they say people are loving nature to death….

Original article:

CORVALLIS: As corals continue to decline around the world, researchers are turning their attention to a possible cause that’s almost totally unexplored – viral disease.

New research has found that corals harbour many different viruses – particularly herpes – plus adenoviruses and other viral families that can cause human colds and gastrointestinal disease. In a paper recently published in the Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology, scientists point out that coral declines are reaching crisis proportions but little has been done so far to explore viral disease as one of the mechanisms for this problem.

“Coral abundance in the Caribbean Sea has gone down about 80% in the past 30 to 40 years, and about one-third of the corals around the world are threatened with extinction,” said lead author Rebecca Vega-Thurber, an assistant professor of microbiology at Oregon State University.

“We’ve identified 22 kinds of emerging disease that affect corals, but still don’t know the pathogens that cause most of them,” she said. “Most researchers have looked only at bacteria. But we suspect viruses may play a role in this as well, and it’s important to learn more about what is causing this problem. Corals are the building blocks of the tropical seas.”

Coral viruses in herpes family

Vega-Thurber and colleagues are studying viral ‘metagenomics’ in corals, meaning the analysis of multiple genomes at the same time. It may help explain one of the underlying causes of coral decline, she said, and is one of the most comprehensive analyses yet done on the types of viruses in a marine animal. It may also shed light on the broader range of viruses that affect not only corals but many other animals, including humans.

One of the surprises from recent research was the predominance in corals of herpes viruses – similar but not identical to the herpes virus that can infect humans. Herpes viruses appear to constitute a majority of the viruses found in corals, and one experiment showed that herpes-like viral sequences were produced in coral tissues after acute episodes of stress.

“We were shocked to find that so many coral viruses were in the herpes family,” Vega-Thurber said. “But corals are one of the oldest animal life forms, evolving around 500 million years ago, and herpes is a very old family of viruses that can infect almost every kind of animal. Herpes and corals may have evolved together.”

Cause of coral decline

It’s not yet certain, the researchers said, whether the viruses being found on corals are actually causing diseases. “Just because you harbour a virus doesn’t mean you are getting sick from it,” Vega-Thurber said. “This is part of what we have to pin down with further research.”

Some of the possible causes of coral decline that have been identified so far include global warming that causes coral bleaching, loss of symbiotic algae that help nourish corals, pollution such as sewage runoff, and human-coral interactions.

A ‘mucus’ sometimes found on corals can harbour human-borne viruses, and levels of these viruses have been correlated with terrestrial human population density. “We have found that nutrient increases from pollution can cause increased levels of viral infection, as do warmer water and physical handling,” Vega-Thurber said. “Now we have to determine if those increases in infection cause actual diseases that are killing the coral.”

Corals are often a major component of marine ecosystems and biodiversity, especially in the tropics. They host thousands of species of fish and other animals. And whether or not viruses are implicated in coral disease, it may also be that they are passing diseases along to fish.

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Baa Humbug
April 2, 2012 6:40 am

I knew it, I just knew it. Those unwashed hairy armpitted free love practicing hippies introduced STDs to the poor defenceless fragile coral.
And I reckon those clown fish weren’t always clowning around. Somebody should check them for THC levels.

Jason Calley
April 2, 2012 7:15 am

Thank goodness it is only herpes!
I was afraid that the coral had come down with clam-idia.

markx
April 2, 2012 8:26 am

The researchers conclude “….is still largely dependent on the compounding effects of increasing thermal stress from global warming and …”
This would appear to be a compulsory paragraph for anyone wishing to get published in the scientific literature today.
I wonder, do all scientists now already know they need to put it in? Or is it pointed out to them in the review process?

murrayv
April 2, 2012 8:35 am

In Q1 2010, we had unusually cold weather in Florida, AND THE gULF WATERS GOT DOWN TO 52 degress F, a temperature at which several species of fish and coral die of hypothermia, so there was a big increase in bleached coral down around Key West. One wonders if the coral caught cold and then succumbed to a viral infection.

j ferguson
April 2, 2012 8:48 am

Martin Clark: ” Systems engineering studies at my former workplace (JCU) in the early 90′s found that ships were 35 times more likely to be involved in an incident if the pilot was on board.”
Can we assume that the data were zeroed for where the navigation occurred? For example was the population of incidents limited to waters where pilots are required? Or waters where they are not required, with the waters where they are required excluded? There is some opportunity for slop here, ala “a very high percentage of plane crashes occur with a pilot on board.”
This is not to broach the distribution of responsibility with a harbor pilot on board ship where the pilot has no responsibility for his guidance and the captain retains all responsibility, or in the Panama Canal for that matter.

Andrew
April 2, 2012 9:11 am

Jason Calley says:
April 2, 2012 at 7:15 am
“Thank goodness it is only herpes!
I was afraid that the coral had come down with clam-idia.”
Excellent Mr Calley!
The rush to blame everything on global warming has gone way passed the point of calling it ridiculous.
We all know how the great David Suzuki loves to tell us all how we should live our lives…maybe he should be worried about all the RAW SEWAGE Victoria BC pumps into the ocean…
http://www.sanjuanjournal.com/news/101659093.html
The head of British Columbia’s environmental agency on Wednesday approved a wastewater management strategy that calls for construction of a primary treatment facility near the city of Victoria and that will for the first time treat up to 40 billion liters of sewage a year before it is discharged into the Strait of Juan de Fuca.
As much as 34 million gallons of raw sewage is discharged each day into the marine waters separating Vancouver Island and Washington state, and the lack of wastewater treatment has been a hotly-debated and thorny issue on both sides of the border, said Barry Penner, head of B.C.’s Ministry of Environment. (gee could that be impacting native salmon runs Suzuki?)
How many millions of tons of raw sewage we dumped into the oceans after the two big Tsunami’s that hit the western Pacific? Could that play a role? Or all the cruise ships and other large ocean going vessels…
Grrr…

Charlie A
April 2, 2012 9:18 am

The herpes virus is also the cause of tumors (fibropapillomas) in sea turtles. http://www.turtles.org/tumour.htm

Gary Swift
April 2, 2012 1:32 pm

AGW is obviously making the corals more vulnerable to disease. And, furthermore, since it’s happening to coral, it’s sure to affect our food supply too, so we’re all going to starve in 20 years or something like that. OMG!!

Richard
April 2, 2012 7:00 pm

If it’s proven to be disease, the warmist cult will simply say that gw is making the disease spread faster. But whatever the cause is, an 80% decline in corals is terrifying.

Gary Swift
April 3, 2012 5:48 am

to Richard:
“If it’s proven to be disease, the warmist cult will simply say ”
lol, of course they’ll blame it on global warming.
The story above is a little bit self-serving though. While the above story is about viral infection, there has been a lot of work on bacterial infection of coral. They briefly mention this in the story above, but there has been significant progress in this area. Recent efforts to properly treat human waste water on islands near suffering coral reefs has resulted in unexpectedly quick recovery of the reefs. I see it as being similar to UHI in a few ways.

April 3, 2012 11:31 am

Charlie A says:
April 2, 2012 at 9:18 am
The herpes virus is also the cause of tumors (fibropapillomas) in sea turtles. http://www.turtles.org/tumour.htm
Sea Lions get it too…
http://www.oregonlive.com/environment/index.ssf/2009/06/ten_sea_lions_killed_near_bonn.html
Could this be like some sort of bizzare “Al Gore” cooling effect? Possibly linked to places Paris Hilton has recently been swimming?
I bet someone could get a federal grant or something to study this…

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