Sea Star Wasting Disease
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Sea star wasting disease or starfish wasting syndrome is a disease of starfish and several other
echinoderm An echinoderm () is any member of the phylum Echinodermata (). The adults are recognisable by their (usually five-point) radial symmetry, and include starfish, brittle stars, sea urchins, sand dollars, and sea cucumbers, as well as the s ...
s that appears sporadically, causing mass mortality of those affected. There are approximately 40 species of sea stars that have been affected by this disease. The disease seems to be associated with increased water temperatures in some locales, but not others. It starts with the emergence of lesions, followed by body fragmentation and death. In 2014 it was suggested that the disease is associated with a single-stranded DNA virus now known as the sea star-associated densovirus (SSaDV). Sea star wasting disease is still not fully understood.


Symptoms

Typically the first symptom of sea star wasting disease is refusal to accept food followed by listlessness for weeks and then white lesions that appear on the surface of the starfish and spread rapidly, followed by decay of tissue surrounding the lesions. Next the animal becomes limp as the
water vascular system The water vascular system is a hydraulic system used by echinoderms, such as sea stars and sea urchins, for locomotion, food and waste transportation, and respiration. The system is composed of canals connecting numerous tube feet. Echinoderms m ...
fails and it is no longer able to maintain its internal hydrostatic balance. The sea star loses its grip on the substrate. The body structure begins to break down, signs of stretching appear between the arms which may twist and fall off, and the animal dies. The arms may continue to crawl around for a while after being shed. Progression of these events can be rapid, leading to death within a few days. A deflated appearance can precede other morphological signs of the disease. All of these symptoms are also associated with ordinary attributes of unhealthy stars and can arise when an individual is stranded too high in the intertidal zone (for example) and simply desiccates. "True" wasting disease will be present in individuals that are found in suitable habitat, often in the midst of other individuals that might also be affected. The final result is a disintegrated, white, mushy blob, which no longer seems to be a sea star.


1972 plague

The 1972 plague was the first notable case of Sea Star Wasting Disease.Meyer, Anna. "Will the Sea Stars Ever Be Able to Recover? - Islands' Sounder." Islands' Sounder. N.p., 20 July 2015. Web. 8 October 2015. Scientists noticed a rapidly declining population of common starfish (''
Asterias rubens The common starfish, common sea star or sugar starfish (''Asterias rubens'') is the most common and familiar starfish in the north-east Atlantic. Belonging to the family Asteriidae, it has five arms and usually grows to between 10–30  ...
'') occurring off the east coast of the United States. The symptoms were that the starfish became limp and lost limbs until finally melting into a white mucus-like paste.


1978 plague

In 1978 large numbers of '' Heliaster kubiniji'' succumbed to a wasting disease in the
Gulf of California The Gulf of California ( es, Golfo de California), also known as the Sea of Cortés (''Mar de Cortés'') or Sea of Cortez, or less commonly as the Vermilion Sea (''Mar Bermejo''), is a marginal sea of the Pacific Ocean that separates the Baja C ...
. At the time, it was suspected that high water temperatures were a causal factor. This sea star became locally extinct in some parts of the gulf, and some populations had not recovered by the year 2000. Because this sea star is a top-level
predator Predation is a biological interaction where one organism, the predator, kills and eats another organism, its prey. It is one of a family of common feeding behaviours that includes parasitism and micropredation (which usually do not kill th ...
, its disappearance had profound effects on the
ecosystem An ecosystem (or ecological system) consists of all the organisms and the physical environment with which they interact. These biotic and abiotic components are linked together through nutrient cycles and energy flows. Energy enters the syste ...
. In the
Channel Islands The Channel Islands ( nrf, Îles d'la Manche; french: îles Anglo-Normandes or ''îles de la Manche'') are an archipelago in the English Channel, off the French coast of Normandy. They include two Crown Dependencies: the Bailiwick of Jersey, ...
off the coast of California, ten species of sea star were recorded as being affected as well as three species of sea urchins, two
brittle star Brittle stars, serpent stars, or ophiuroids (; ; referring to the serpent-like arms of the brittle star) are echinoderms in the class Ophiuroidea, closely related to starfish. They crawl across the sea floor using their flexible arms for locomot ...
s and a sea cucumber, all of which experienced large population declines.


2013–current plagues

In July 2013, populations of sea stars declined rapidly on the east coast of the US between New Jersey and Maine. There had been a great increase in sea star numbers three years earlier, though in 2013 they were dying off. No cause for the mysterious deaths was apparent. On the Pacific coast, a meltdown of sea stars was first found in ochre stars and sunflower stars in
Howe Sound Howe Sound (french: Baie (de /d')Howe, squ, Átl'ka7tsem, Nexwnéwu7ts, Txwnéwu7ts) is a roughly triangular sound, that joins a network of fjords situated immediately northwest of Vancouver, British Columbia. It was designated as a UNESCO Biosp ...
, British Columbia. In late August, the disease had also been found stretching from Alaska to the border of Mexico, affecting more than 20 species of sea stars on the west coast. At the beginning of September 2013, a mass die-off of sea stars was reported off the coast of British Columbia. The sea bed was littered with disintegrating sunflower stars (''
Pycnopodia helianthoides ''Pycnopodia helianthoides'', commonly known as the sunflower sea star, is a large sea star found in the northeast Pacific. The only species of its genus, it is among the largest sea stars in the world, with a maximum arm span of . Adult sunflow ...
''), their detached arms and discs. Another species also suffering mortalities was the morning sun star (''
Solaster dawsoni ''Solaster dawsoni'', the morning sun star, is a species of starfish in the family Solasteridae. It is found on either side of the northern Pacific Ocean. It has two subspecies: *''S. d. arcticus'' Verrill, 1914 *''S. d. dawsoni'' Verrill, 1880 ...
''), but no cause for the deaths was apparent. If they were caused by infection or toxins, the two species might have affected each other because the diet of each includes sea stars. In spring/summer 2013, reports of sea stars experiencing wasting symptoms came from Vancouver, B.C. and from southern and central California. Observations of symptoms spread throughout California, Washington and southern Canada throughout 2013, but sea star wasting disease did not begin affecting sea stars in the intertidal zone in Oregon until spring 2014. The relatively high resolution of understanding of the pattern of disease spread came from marine scientists working along the coast, but also from citizen scientists visiting the coast and uploading their observations, of where they saw sea stars both with and without disease symptoms, to an online sea star wasting observation log database. Because scientists had been studying sea star populations before the outbreak of sea star wasting disease, there is a good understanding of how the disease affected population sizes and dynamics. A study of the ochre sea star ('' Pisaster ochraceus'') populations from San Diego, California, to southern British Columbia, along with at two locations near Sitka, Alaska, found that population declines were proportionately greater for sea stars in the southern part of the coast than the north; population numbers are usually higher at more northerly locations, so the number of sea stars that died from wasting disease was often higher at more northern sites. In October 2013, in a marine laboratory seawater tank in California holding various species of sea stars, other species started displaying similar symptoms. The ochre star ('' Pisaster ochraceus'') was the first affected. Most of these developed symptoms, lost arms and died over the course of a week or so. Later the rainbow star (''
Orthasterias koehleri ''Orthasterias'' is a genus of sea stars in the family Asteriidae. ''Orthasterias koehleri'', the rainbow star or red-banded sea star, is the only species in the genus. It is found in the North Pacific Ocean. Description The rainbow star is a ...
'') developed the disease and died, but the bat star ('' Patiria miniata'') and leather star (''
Dermasterias imbricata The leather star (''Dermasterias imbricata'') is a sea star in the family Asteropseidae found at depths to off the western seaboard of North America. It was first described to science by Adolph Eduard Grube in 1857. Description The leather st ...
''), which were living in the same tank and had been scavenging on the corpses, showed no ill effects. At Natural Bridges State Marine Reserve in California, the ochre star is normally a common resident on the mussel beds, but by November 2013 it was reported to have completely disappeared. As of 2021, the Sea Star Wasting Disease, following its initial outbreak in 2013, is regarded as a record-breaking marine epizootic. There have been signs of some recovery of ochre sea star populations ('' Pisaster ochraceus''), with higher numbers of juvenile sea stars in the intertidal than had been previously common, especially for northern sites along the Pacific coast. However, the biomass and the function of ochre sea stars in their communities, such as being important predators of mussels, has remained lower than pre-disease levels.


Locations

Currently, most cases are located on the west coast of North America, affecting sea stars from Baja California to the gulf of Alaska
Map of Sea Star Wasting Syndrome Locations


Causes

As of November 2013, no identifiable cause for the disease had been found.
Pathogen In biology, a pathogen ( el, πάθος, "suffering", "passion" and , "producer of") in the oldest and broadest sense, is any organism or agent that can produce disease. A pathogen may also be referred to as an infectious agent, or simply a germ ...
ic bacteria did not seem to be present, and though the plague might be caused by a viral or fungal pathogen, no causal agent had been found. Each episode of plague might have a different cause. Other possible causes of the condition that have been suggested include high sea temperatures, oxygen depletion and low salinity due to freshwater runoff. Research suggests that high water temperatures can be indeed linked to the disease, increasing its incidence and virulence. The disease also seems more prevalent in sheltered waters than in open seas with much wave movement. One result of
global warming In common usage, climate change describes global warming—the ongoing increase in global average temperature—and its effects on Earth's climate system. Climate change in a broader sense also includes previous long-term changes to E ...
is higher sea temperatures. There is a wave of unusually warm water along the west coast of the United States, which is where all of the sea stars are dying off. These may impact both on starfish and on echinoderm populations in general, and a ciliate protozoan parasite (''
Orchitophrya stellarum ''Orchitophrya stellarum'' is a species of single-celled marine ciliates, a member of the class Oligohymenophorea. It is found living freely in the north Atlantic and Pacific Oceans but is also parasitic, being found inside the gonads of starfish ...
'') of starfish, which eats sperm and effectively emasculates male starfish, thrives at higher temperatures. However, temperature was not related to the initial outbreak of sea star wasting disease at many places along the coast. Unlike with many other wildlife diseases, there was no link between the density of sea stars at a location before disease outbreak and the severity of population decline. Thus, this outbreak has defied prediction using what is typically understood about disease spread. Research in 2014 showed that the cause of the disease is transmissible from one starfish to another and that the disease-causing agent is a microorganism in the virus-size range. The most likely candidate causal agent was found to be the sea star-associated densovirus (SSaDV), which was found to be in greater abundance in diseased starfish than in healthy ones. However, evidence for this virus as the cause of sea star wasting disease is inconclusive. In addition, the process of how the virus kills sea stars is not fully understood either. Subsequent work in 2018 and 2020 showed that SSaDV was not associated with sea star wasting disease. Sea star wasting disease may not be pathogenic or infectious in nature. Work in 2021 provided evidence that sea star wasting disease may be linked to microorganisms that inhabit the diffusive boundary layer around sea star tissues; elevated water temperatures and increased supply or organic matter which is released from phytoplankton may cause these bacteria to deplete oxygen in waters around sea stars and thus affect the ability of sea stars to respire.


Treatment

In 2014,
Point Defiance Zoo Point Defiance Zoo & Aquarium (PDZA) is the only combined zoo and aquarium in the Pacific Northwest, located in Tacoma, Washington, US, owned by Metro Parks Tacoma. Situated on in Tacoma's Point Defiance Park, the zoo and aquarium are home to ov ...
and Aquarium lost more than half of its 369 sea stars, and by September 2015 they numbered fewer than 100. The aquarium treated its affected sea stars with antibiotics in 2014, which proved effective. Although a mechanism is still unknown, evidence suggests that a single mutation in the elongation factor 1-alpha locus in ''Pisaster ochraceus'' may be associated with reduced mortality.Wares, J. P. and L. M. Schiebelhut, 2016. PeerJ 4:e1876 https://peerj.com/articles/1876/?td=wk


Species affected

Most affected (high mortality rates): *''
Solaster dawsoni ''Solaster dawsoni'', the morning sun star, is a species of starfish in the family Solasteridae. It is found on either side of the northern Pacific Ocean. It has two subspecies: *''S. d. arcticus'' Verrill, 1914 *''S. d. dawsoni'' Verrill, 1880 ...
'' (morning sun star), *''
Pisaster brevispinus ''Pisaster brevispinus'', commonly called the pink sea star, giant pink sea star, or short-spined sea star, is a species of sea star in the northeast Pacific Ocean. It was first described to science by William Stimson in 1857. The type specime ...
'' (giant pink star), *'' Pisaster ochraceus'' (ochre/purple star), *''
Pycnopodia helianthoides ''Pycnopodia helianthoides'', commonly known as the sunflower sea star, is a large sea star found in the northeast Pacific. The only species of its genus, it is among the largest sea stars in the world, with a maximum arm span of . Adult sunflow ...
'' (sunflower star), *'' Evasterias troschelii'' (mottled star), Affected (some mortality): *''
Dermasterias imbricata The leather star (''Dermasterias imbricata'') is a sea star in the family Asteropseidae found at depths to off the western seaboard of North America. It was first described to science by Adolph Eduard Grube in 1857. Description The leather st ...
'' (leather star), *''
Solaster stimpsoni ''Solaster stimpsoni'', common names Stimpson's sun star, sun star, orange sun star, striped sunstar, and sun sea star, is a species of starfish in the family Solasteridae. Description ''Solaster stimpsoni'' is a large species, growing up to 5 ...
'' (striped sun star), *''
Orthasterias koehleri ''Orthasterias'' is a genus of sea stars in the family Asteriidae. ''Orthasterias koehleri'', the rainbow star or red-banded sea star, is the only species in the genus. It is found in the North Pacific Ocean. Description The rainbow star is a ...
'' (rainbow star), *'' Henricia spp.'' (blood star), *'' Leptasterias spp'' (six-armed star), *'' Patiria (Asterina) miniata'' (bat star), and *'' Pisaster giganteus'' (giant star)


See also

*
Effects of global warming on oceans Among the effects of climate change on oceans are: an increase in sea surface temperature as well as ocean temperatures at greater depths, more frequent marine heatwaves, a reduction in pH value, a rise in sea level from ocean warming and ice ...


References

{{reflist, 30em


External links


Map of Sea Star Wasting Syndrome Locations
Animal viral diseases Asteroidea