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<em>Vibrio pectenicida</em> strain FHCF-3 is a causative agent of sea star wasting disease Prentice, Melanie; Crandall, Grace; Chan, Amy; Davis, Katherine; Hershberger, Paul; Finke, Jan; Hodin, Jason; McCracken, Andrew; Kellogg, Colleen; Carvalho, Rute; Prentice, Carolyn; Zhong, Kevin; Harvell, C.; Suttle, Curtis; Gehman, Alyssa-Lois
Description
Abstract
More than ten years following the onset of the sea star wasting disease (SSWD) epidemic, affecting over 20 asteroid species from Mexico to Alaska, the causative agent has been elusive. SSWD killed billions of the most susceptible species, sunflower sea stars (Pycnopodia helianthoides), initiating a trophic cascade involving unchecked urchin population growth and widespread loss of kelp forests. Identifying the causative agent underpins the development of recovery strategies. Here, we induced disease and subsequent mortality in exposure experiments using tissue extracts, coelomic fluid, and effluent water from wasting sunflower sea stars, with no mortality in controls. Deep sequencing of diseased sea star coelomic fluid samples from experiments and field outbreaks revealed a dominant proportion of reads assigned to the causative agent. Fulfilling Koch’s postulates, the pathogen, cultured from the coelomic fluid of a diseased sunflower sea star, caused disease and mortality in exposed sunflower sea stars, demonstrating that it is a causative agent of SSWD. This discovery will enable recovery efforts for sea stars and the ecosystems affected by their decline by facilitating culture-based experimental research and broad-scale screening for pathogen presence and abundance in the laboratory and field.
Item Metadata
| Title |
<em>Vibrio pectenicida</em> strain FHCF-3 is a causative agent of sea star wasting disease
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| Creator | |
| Date Issued |
2025-12-18
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| Description |
Abstract
More than ten years following the onset of the sea star wasting disease (SSWD) epidemic, affecting over 20 asteroid species from Mexico to Alaska, the causative agent has been elusive. SSWD killed billions of the most susceptible species, sunflower sea stars (Pycnopodia helianthoides), initiating a trophic cascade involving unchecked urchin population growth and widespread loss of kelp forests. Identifying the causative agent underpins the development of recovery strategies. Here, we induced disease and subsequent mortality in exposure experiments using tissue extracts, coelomic fluid, and effluent water from wasting sunflower sea stars, with no mortality in controls. Deep sequencing of diseased sea star coelomic fluid samples from experiments and field outbreaks revealed a dominant proportion of reads assigned to the causative agent. Fulfilling Koch’s postulates, the pathogen, cultured from the coelomic fluid of a diseased sunflower sea star, caused disease and mortality in exposed sunflower sea stars, demonstrating that it is a causative agent of SSWD. This discovery will enable recovery efforts for sea stars and the ecosystems affected by their decline by facilitating culture-based experimental research and broad-scale screening for pathogen presence and abundance in the laboratory and field. |
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| Notes |
Dryad version number: 19 Version status: submitted Dryad curation status: Published Sharing link: http://datadryad.org/dataset/doi:10.5061/dryad.5mkkwh7g9</p> Storage size: 1190200 Visibility: public |
| Date Available |
2025-12-17
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| Provider |
University of British Columbia Library
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| License |
CC0 1.0
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| DOI |
10.14288/1.0451055
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| URI | |
| Publisher DOI | |
| Grant Funding Agency |
Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada; The Nature Conservancy of California; University of British Columbia; United States Geological Survey; Quantitative and Evolutionary STEM Traineeship
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| Rights URI | |
| Aggregated Source Repository |
Dataverse
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CC0 1.0