ANJANI GANASE
As marine scientists work to figure out what’s affecting precious sea urchin colonies, they ask all divers, snorkelers, swimmers to report all sightings of sea urchins - healthy, ailing or dying - to the network that is tracking disease spread. Dr Anjani Ganase reports.
On Caribbean coral reefs, the long spined urchins (Diadema antiilarum) are important grazers of algae on coral reefs. Algae compete for space with corals and other benthic creatures on reefs, and these urchins maintain algae-free surfaces to allow corals to settle and grow.
In mid-February of 2022, a local dive shop observed dozens of dead Diademas in a harbour in St Thomas. With news of the die-off, local researchers began investigating neighbouring sites only to observe more dead and sick sea urchins.
All observations show that when the urchins become sick, they detach from the bottom, then lose control of their tube feet. And in the last stages – often after two days – they shed their spines and suffer from tissue-loss and death.
Mortality is high among the infected and the disease transfers quickly to those living in the vicinity. The disease spreads rapidly.
Within a month, sea urchins of neighbouring islands St Johns, Saba and Eustatius have been observed to sicken and die.
Since the Atlantic and Gulf Rapid Response (AGRRA) Network started tracking, reports up to today already indicate die-offs as far as north as Jamaica, with the closest outbreak to Trinidad and Tobago reported in St Vincent and the Grenadines. The long-spined urchins also appear not to be the only species vulnerable to the disease. Other species such as the West Indian Sea Egg and the Pencil urchin have also been observed to suffer the same symptoms before mortality.
[caption id="attachment_949645" align="alignnone" width="1024"] Sick, dying Diadema with high loss of spines. PHOTO BY DR KIMANI KITSON-WALTERS COURTESY AGRRA DIADEMA RESPONSE NETWORK -[/caption]
The Caribbean is no stranger to disease outbreaks on coral reefs.
Since the 1970s and 1980s, diseases have devastated coral reefs throughout the Caribbean. During the 1970s, the white disease plagued and killed up to 97 per cent of all the Acropora branching species throughout the Caribbean. Then during the 1980s, a disease wiped out the same species of D. antillarum throughout the Caribbean within a few years.
In Tobago, observations of dead sea urchin skeletons and dying sea urchins with their spines falling off were recorded by the Institute of Marine Affairs in northeast Tobago in the early 1980s.
Today, there has been some recovery in populations but the numbers are nowhere close to what they used to be. Scientists were never able to determine the agents of the disease.
Over the past 20 or more years, diseases have been spreading throughout the Caribbean infecting corals and other invertebrates like wildfire. This is on top the onslaught of other conditions inflicted by humans and climate change.
Causes of the new diseases are typically associated with poorer water qualit