Fig 1.
Gross lesions on S. siderea colonies Examples of S. siderea lesions on colonies tagged in Fort Lauderdale (A and B) and Florida Keys (C and D).
White areas on colonies in Fort Lauderdale indicates bleaching not tissue loss.
Fig 2.
Schematic of the experimental design for transmission studies in aquaria.
Symbols with the same color indicate coral fragments were collected from the same colony. ‘H’ refers to an apparent healthy fragment and ‘D’ refers to a disease fragment displaying lesions.
Fig 3.
Regional differences in disease prevalence through time for tagged colonies of diseased S. siderea.
(A) Prevalence of six colonies in Fort Lauderdale. (B) Prevalence of 17 colonies in the Florida Keys.
Fig 4.
Representative photos of tagged S. siderea with lesions at Fort Lauderdale.
C54 (left) shows a bleached lesion that progressed to partial tissue loss. C56 (right) shows a bleached lesion that resolved through time.
Fig 5.
Representative photos of tagged S. siderea with lesions in the Florida Keys.
C68 (far left panel) shows a colony with initial multi-focal bleached patches with some tissue loss (Nov 2019) that shows lesion resolution (no bleached spots) but with partial colony mortality (Dec 2020). C80 (middle panel) shows two colonies with initial tissue loss lesions and purple discoloration (Nov 2019) with both colonies progressing to near complete colony mortality (May 2021). C57 (far right panel) shows colony with initial multi-focal purple discoloration with some tissue loss (Nov 2019) that progresses to near complete mortality (May 2020).
Table 1.
Percent of microscopic lesions observed in histology sections of S. siderea collected in different regions along Florida’s Coral Reef.
Fig 6.
Gross pathological changes of post-fixed S. siderea collected from Florida’s Coral Reef.
(A) tissue loss lesions with no pigmentation. (B) tissue loss with bleached lesions. (C) tissue loss with purple discoloration. (D) purple discoloration. All scale bars = 2 mm.
Fig 7.
Histopathology of S. siderea collected from Florida’s Coral Reef.
(A) Radial section across the oral cavity showing lytic necrosis lesions (black arrows) and sloughing of necrotic tissue into the oral cavity (red arrows) (H&E; scale bar = 500 µm). (B) Representative sagittal section along the septa showing border (white line) between surface bleaching (blue arrows) with reduced density of, loss of, or in situ necrosis of endosymbiotic Symbiodiniaceae with abnormal appearance (white arrows), and apparently healthy tissue (red arrows) with endosymbionts (black arrows). Note abnormal appearance of remnant endosymbionts (white hollow arrows) and general loss of cytoplasm or increased mucus (white space) in lesioned area (H&E; scale bar = 50 µm). Inset shown with enlarged abnormal endosymbiont (scale bar = 20 µm). (C) Periodic acid-Schiff stain (PAS) Sagittal section at the gastrodermal layer close to the surface area showing endosymbionts filled with PAS-positive (pink, red) starch granules (black arrows) (PAS-MY: scale bar = 5 µm). (D) Sagittal section of the mesenterial filament close to the surface area showing prominent coral-acid rich protein (CARP) granules (black arrow) in the calicodermal layer, possibly reacting to adjacent endoliths (red arrow) in the skeleton. Compare with apparent (subjective) thinner layer or presumptive lower density of CARPs (blue arrow) on the other side of the mesentery with less endoliths (H&E; scale bar = 500 µm).
Fig 8.
Representative photos of disease progression in coral fragments used in transmission experiments using S. siderea.
A-C and G-I are diseased S. siderea and D-F and J-L are test fragments that developed lesions. Left panels shows the fragments at the start of the experiment. Middle panels show fragments on the date that contact was removed between healthy test fragments and the diseased S. siderea. Right panels show fragments on termination of the experiment. A-F shows transmission that resulted in bleaching. G-L shows transmission that resulted in progressive tissue loss.
Fig 9.
Representative photos of disease progression in coral fragments used in transmission experiments using S. siderea and O. faveolata.
A-C and G-I are diseased S. siderea and D-F and J-L are test O. faveolata fragments that developed lesions. Left panels shows the fragments at the start of the experiment. Middle panels show fragments on the date that contact was removed between healthy test fragments and the diseased S. siderea. Right panels show fragments on termination of the experiment. A-F shows transmission from diseased S. siderea with a bleached lesion. G-L shows transmission from S. siderea with a lesion with purple pigmentation.
Fig 10.
Response of S. siderea with lesions to treatment with antibiotics.
(n = 18 paired fragments).
Fig 11.
Representative photos of the response of diseased S. siderea fragments to antibiotic treatment.
Coral fragments were split in half with one half treated with antibiotics and the other half left untreated as a control. Top row is of fragments at the start of the experiment and bottom row of fragments at the end of the experiment.