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Dive into the research topics where C. Drew Harvell is active.

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Featured researches published by C. Drew Harvell.


Nature | 2010

Impacts of biodiversity on the emergence and transmission of infectious diseases

Felicia Keesing; Lisa K. Belden; Peter Daszak; Andrew P. Dobson; C. Drew Harvell; Robert D. Holt; Peter J. Hudson; Anna E. Jolles; Kate E. Jones; Charles E. Mitchell; Samuel S. Myers; Tiffany L. Bogich; Richard S. Ostfeld

Current unprecedented declines in biodiversity reduce the ability of ecological communities to provide many fundamental ecosystem services. Here we evaluate evidence that reduced biodiversity affects the transmission of infectious diseases of humans, other animals and plants. In principle, loss of biodiversity could either increase or decrease disease transmission. However, mounting evidence indicates that biodiversity loss frequently increases disease transmission. In contrast, areas of naturally high biodiversity may serve as a source pool for new pathogens. Overall, despite many remaining questions, current evidence indicates that preserving intact ecosystems and their endemic biodiversity should generally reduce the prevalence of infectious diseases.


PLOS Biology | 2007

Thermal stress and coral cover as drivers of coral disease outbreaks

John F. Bruno; Elizabeth R. Selig; Kenneth S. Casey; Cathie A. Page; Bette L. Willis; C. Drew Harvell; Hugh Sweatman; Amy Melendy

Very little is known about how environmental changes such as increasing temperature affect disease dynamics in the ocean, especially at large spatial scales. We asked whether the frequency of warm temperature anomalies is positively related to the frequency of coral disease across 1,500 km of Australias Great Barrier Reef. We used a new high-resolution satellite dataset of ocean temperature and 6 y of coral disease and coral cover data from annual surveys of 48 reefs to answer this question. We found a highly significant relationship between the frequencies of warm temperature anomalies and of white syndrome, an emergent disease, or potentially, a group of diseases, of Pacific reef-building corals. The effect of temperature was highly dependent on coral cover because white syndrome outbreaks followed warm years, but only on high (>50%) cover reefs, suggesting an important role of host density as a threshold for outbreaks. Our results indicate that the frequency of temperature anomalies, which is predicted to increase in most tropical oceans, can increase the susceptibility of corals to disease, leading to outbreaks where corals are abundant.


Science | 2013

Climate Change and Infectious Diseases: From Evidence to a Predictive Framework

Sonia Altizer; Richard S. Ostfeld; Pieter T. J. Johnson; Susan J. Kutz; C. Drew Harvell

Scientists have long predicted large-scale responses of infectious diseases to climate change, giving rise to a polarizing debate, especially concerning human pathogens for which socioeconomic drivers and control measures can limit the detection of climate-mediated changes. Climate change has already increased the occurrence of diseases in some natural and agricultural systems, but in many cases, outcomes depend on the form of climate change and details of the host-pathogen system. In this review, we highlight research progress and gaps that have emerged during the past decade and develop a predictive framework that integrates knowledge from ecophysiology and community ecology with modeling approaches. Future work must continue to anticipate and monitor pathogen biodiversity and disease trends in natural ecosystems and identify opportunities to mitigate the impacts of climate-driven disease emergence.


Trends in Microbiology | 2009

Microbial disease and the coral holobiont.

David G. Bourne; Melissa Garren; Thierry M. Work; Eugene Rosenberg; Garriet W. Smith; C. Drew Harvell

Tropical coral reefs harbour a reservoir of enormous biodiversity that is increasingly threatened by direct human activities and indirect global climate shifts. Emerging coral diseases are one serious threat implicated in extensive reef deterioration through disruption of the integrity of the coral holobiont - a complex symbiosis between the coral animal, endobiotic alga and an array of microorganisms. In this article, we review our current understanding of the role of microorganisms in coral health and disease, and highlight the pressing interdisciplinary research priorities required to elucidate the mechanisms of disease. We advocate an approach that applies knowledge gained from experiences in human and veterinary medicine, integrated into multidisciplinary studies that investigate the interactions between host, agent and environment of a given coral disease. These approaches include robust and precise disease diagnosis, standardised ecological methods and application of rapidly developing DNA, RNA and protein technologies, alongside established histological, microbial ecology and ecological expertise. Such approaches will allow a better understanding of the causes of coral mortality and coral reef declines and help assess potential management options to mitigate their effects in the longer term.


Annual Review of Marine Science | 2014

Climate Change Influences on Marine Infectious Diseases: Implications for Management and Society

Colleen A. Burge; C. Mark Eakin; Carolyn S. Friedman; Brett Froelich; Paul Hershberger; Eileen E. Hofmann; Laura E. Petes; Katherine C. Prager; Ernesto Weil; Bette L. Willis; Susan E. Ford; C. Drew Harvell

Infectious diseases are common in marine environments, but the effects of a changing climate on marine pathogens are not well understood. Here we review current knowledge about how the climate drives host-pathogen interactions and infectious disease outbreaks. Climate-related impacts on marine diseases are being documented in corals, shellfish, finfish, and humans; these impacts are less clearly linked for other organisms. Oceans and people are inextricably linked, and marine diseases can both directly and indirectly affect human health, livelihoods, and well-being. We recommend an adaptive management approach to better increase the resilience of ocean systems vulnerable to marine diseases in a changing climate. Land-based management methods of quarantining, culling, and vaccinating are not successful in the ocean; therefore, forecasting conditions that lead to outbreaks and designing tools/approaches to influence these conditions may be the best way to manage marine disease.


The American Naturalist | 1986

The Ecology and Evolution of Inducible Defenses in a Marine Bryozoan: Cues, Costs, and Consequences

C. Drew Harvell

Membranipora membranacea rapidly deploys defensive spines in response to waterborne cues from a trophically specialized nudibranch, Doridella steinbergae. The defensive response by unattacked colonies is enhanced by a high concentration of predators or an attack on a nearby colony. Small colonies require a higher concentration of inducer than larger colonies, perhaps because defensive costs increase as size decreases. Spines reduce the feeding rate of nudibranchs to approximately 40% of the normal level, but they are produced at a cost in colony growth: colonies producing spines initially grow at 85% of the rate of unspined colonies. In colonial animals, a growth decrement is directly translated into a reduced output of sexual propagules because fecundity is directly proportional to colony size. In addition, intraspecific competition is so intense in M. membranacea that an initial decrement in growth can severely reduce final size. This study supports predictions that the evolution of inducible defenses is favored when (1) prey are not killed in initial encounters with predators, (2) attacks cannot be predicted from cues other than the presence of a predator, and (3) the cost of defense is substantial. Thus, predator-induced defenses are common among organisms not killed in initial encounters with consumers, such as clonal and modular organisms and hosts of parasites.


Integrative and Comparative Biology | 2010

Coral-Associated Bacterial Assemblages: Current Knowledge and the Potential for Climate-Driven Impacts

Morgan E. Mouchka; Ian Hewson; C. Drew Harvell

The importance of associations between microorganisms and their invertebrate hosts is becoming increasingly apparent. An emerging field, driven by the necessity to understand the microbial relationships that both maximize coral health and cause coral disease, is the study of coral-bacteria interactions. In this article, we review our current understanding of the diversity, specificity, development, and functions of coral-associated bacteria. We also summarize what is known regarding the role of coral microbiota in the health and disease of coral. We conduct a meta-analysis to determine whether the presence of unique taxa correlates with the state of coral health (i.e. healthy, diseased or bleached), as well as whether coral reef habitats harbor clusters of distinct taxa. We find that healthy and bleached corals harbor similar dominant taxa, although bleached corals had higher proportions of Vibrio and Acidobacteria. Diseased corals generally had more Rhodobacter, Clostridia, and Cyanobacteria sequences, and fewer Oceanospirillum sequences. We caution, however, that while 16S rRNA is useful for microbial species identification, it is a poor predictor of habitat or lifestyle, and care should be taken in interpretation of 16S rRNA surveys to identify potential pathogens amongst complex coral-microbial assemblages. Finally, we highlight evidence that coral-bacterial assemblages could be sensitive to the effects of climatic change. We suggest that the relationship between coral and their bacterial associates represents a valuable model that can be applied to the broader discipline of invertebrate-microbial interactions.


PLOS ONE | 2008

Cellular Responses in Sea Fan Corals: Granular Amoebocytes React to Pathogen and Climate Stressors

Laura D. Mydlarz; Sally F. Holthouse; Esther C. Peters; C. Drew Harvell

Background Climate warming is causing environmental change making both marine and terrestrial organisms, and even humans, more susceptible to emerging diseases. Coral reefs are among the most impacted ecosystems by climate stress, and immunity of corals, the most ancient of metazoans, is poorly known. Although coral mortality due to infectious diseases and temperature-related stress is on the rise, the immune effector mechanisms that contribute to the resistance of corals to such events remain elusive. In the Caribbean sea fan corals (Anthozoa, Alcyonacea: Gorgoniidae), the cell-based immune defenses are granular acidophilic amoebocytes, which are known to be involved in wound repair and histocompatibility. Methodology/Principal Findings We demonstrate for the first time in corals that these cells are involved in the organismal response to pathogenic and temperature stress. In sea fans with both naturally occurring infections and experimental inoculations with the fungal pathogen Aspergillus sydowii, an inflammatory response, characterized by a massive increase of amoebocytes, was evident near infections. Melanosomes were detected in amoebocytes adjacent to protective melanin bands in infected sea fans; neither was present in uninfected fans. In naturally infected sea fans a concurrent increase in prophenoloxidase activity was detected in infected tissues with dense amoebocytes. Sea fans sampled in the field during the 2005 Caribbean Bleaching Event (a once-in-hundred-year climate event) responded to heat stress with a systemic increase in amoebocytes and amoebocyte densities were also increased by elevated temperature stress in lab experiments. Conclusions/Significance The observed amoebocyte responses indicate that sea fan corals use cellular defenses to combat fungal infection and temperature stress. The ability to mount an inflammatory response may be a contributing factor that allowed the survival of even infected sea fan corals during a stressful climate event.


The American Naturalist | 1992

INDUCIBLE DEFENSES AND THE ALLOCATION OF RESOURCES: A MINIMAL MODEL

Colin W. Clark; C. Drew Harvell

We use dynamic-optimization models to assess the relative fitness consequences of inducible versus constitutive defense strategies. Our models assess the cost of defense in terms of reduced growth and reproduction of the defended organism. Resources are assumed to be allocated to growth, defense, or reproduction via a time- and state-dependent strategy that either does (in the inducible case) or does not (in the constitutive case) depend on the current predation threat. Inducible defenses are shown to be superior whenever predator attacks are unpredictable and sufficiently sustained (once initiated) for the defense to become effective. In the case of inducible defenses, the relative delays involved in switching among growth, reproduction, and defense are shown to be important determinants of the optimal allocation strategy.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Densovirus associated with sea-star wasting disease and mass mortality

Ian Hewson; Jason B. Button; Brent M. Gudenkauf; Benjamin G. Miner; Alisa L. Newton; Joseph K. Gaydos; Janna Wynne; Cathy L. Groves; Gordon Hendler; Michael J. Murray; Steven Fradkin; Mya Breitbart; Elizabeth Fahsbender; Kevin D. Lafferty; A. Marm Kilpatrick; C. Melissa Miner; Peter T. Raimondi; Lesanna L. Lahner; Carolyn S. Friedman; Stephen B. Daniels; Martin Haulena; Jeffrey Marliave; Colleen A. Burge; Morgan E. Eisenlord; C. Drew Harvell

Significance Sea stars inhabiting the Northeast Pacific Coast have recently experienced an extensive outbreak of wasting disease, leading to their degradation and disappearance from many coastal areas. In this paper, we present evidence that the cause of the disease is transmissible from disease-affected animals to apparently healthy individuals, that the disease-causing agent is a virus-sized microorganism, and that the best candidate viral taxon, the sea star-associated densovirus (SSaDV), is in greater abundance in diseased than in healthy sea stars. Populations of at least 20 asteroid species on the Northeast Pacific Coast have recently experienced an extensive outbreak of sea-star (asteroid) wasting disease (SSWD). The disease leads to behavioral changes, lesions, loss of turgor, limb autotomy, and death characterized by rapid degradation (“melting”). Here, we present evidence from experimental challenge studies and field observations that link the mass mortalities to a densovirus (Parvoviridae). Virus-sized material (i.e., <0.2 μm) from symptomatic tissues that was inoculated into asymptomatic asteroids consistently resulted in SSWD signs whereas animals receiving heat-killed (i.e., control) virus-sized inoculum remained asymptomatic. Viral metagenomic investigations revealed the sea star-associated densovirus (SSaDV) as the most likely candidate virus associated with tissues from symptomatic asteroids. Quantification of SSaDV during transmission trials indicated that progression of SSWD paralleled increased SSaDV load. In field surveys, SSaDV loads were more abundant in symptomatic than in asymptomatic asteroids. SSaDV could be detected in plankton, sediments and in nonasteroid echinoderms, providing a possible mechanism for viral spread. SSaDV was detected in museum specimens of asteroids from 1942, suggesting that it has been present on the North American Pacific Coast for at least 72 y. SSaDV is therefore the most promising candidate disease agent responsible for asteroid mass mortality.

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Ernesto Weil

University of Puerto Rico

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Maya L. Groner

University of Prince Edward Island

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John F. Bruno

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Laura D. Mydlarz

University of Texas at Arlington

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