Researchers race to understand disease killing #Caribbeancorals at unprecedented rates
Corals, like humans, sometimes get sick. But stony coral tissue loss disease #SCTLD is different, researchers say. It afflicts an unprecedented number of species, has spread over a vast area, kills incredibly quickly. Massive coral colonies, some hundreds of years old, can die within weeks or months, leaving reefs unrecognizable
Ruth Kamnitzer
#ClimateChange #CoralReefs
#CoralBleaching
https://news.mongabay.com/2025/06/researchers-race-to-understand-new-disease-killing-caribbean-corals-at-unprecedented-rates/
Researchers race to understand new disease killing Caribbean corals at unprecedented rates

This May, divers found stony coral tissue loss disease on corals in Laughing Bird Caye National Park, Belize, for the first time. The team from Fragments of Hope, a nonprofit, regularly monitors the site. A month previously there had been no sign at all of the disease. But on their trip in May, they found […]

Mongabay Environmental News

"Stony Coral Tissue Loss Disease (SCTLD) has wreaked havoc on coral reefs across the Caribbean, resulting in significant mortality of various coral species, including Pseudodiploria strigosa, which has been particularly affected in the Mexican Caribbean".

#coralreef #SCTLD #pseudodiploriastrigosa
https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/995219

New study demonstrates the potential of diseased coral parents in restoring stony coral tissue loss disease-affected species

Stony Coral Tissue Loss Disease (SCTLD) has wreaked havoc on coral reefs across the Caribbean, resulting in significant mortality of various coral species, including Pseudodiploria strigosa, which has been particularly affected in the Mexican Caribbean. In response to the decreased abundance and colony density caused by SCTLD, scientists have explored larval-based restoration methods, despite concerns about disease transmission. A new PeerJ Life & Environment study reveals that even colonies affected by SCTLD can play a vital role in the assisted sexual reproduction for the restoration of SCTLD-susceptible species.

EurekAlert!
Scientists discover new clues to cause of devastating coral disease

Biologists at The University of Texas at Arlington have published new findings from a study to learn how different coral species respond to a devastating disease and which species are more vulnerable.

Phys.org
Eine tödliche Krankheit verwüstet seit 2014 Korallenriffe um Florida und breitet sich in der Karibik aus. Nun gibt es womöglich ein Gegenmittel.#StonyCoralTissueLossDisease #SCTLD #Korallen #Korallenriffe #Riffe #Korallenbleiche #Krankheiten #Probiotika #Ozenae #Florida #Karibik #Biologie
Probiotika schützen Korallen vor tödlicher Krankheit
Probiotika schützen Korallen vor tödlicher Krankheit

Eine tödliche Krankheit verwüstet seit 2014 Korallenriffe um Florida und breitet sich in der Karibik aus. Nun gibt es womöglich ein Gegenmittel.

Spektrum.de