The scientists said on Monday they identified the pathogen as the
Sea Star Associated Densovirus, or SSaDV, after ruling out other
possible culprits including certain bacteria, protozoans and fungi.
More than 20 species of starfish, also called sea stars, from
southern Alaska to Baja California are dying from a wasting disease
that causes white lesions to appear before the animal's body sags,
ruptures and spills out its internal organs.
"They basically fall apart into a pile of goo on the bottom of the
seafloor," said Cornell University biological oceanographer and
microbial ecologist Ian Hewson, who led the study in the journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
SSaDV is a parvovirus, a tiny form of virus that can cause illness
in animals and people.
The researchers detected it in older starfish samples, museum
specimens from as early as 1942. They said it may have been present
at low levels for years and only recently became a large-scale
threat due to some kind of viral mutation, environmental trigger,
starfish overpopulation or other factor.
"It's probably the largest epidemic in marine wildlife that we know
of," Cornell ecologist Drew Harvell said.
"That's the million-dollar question in all this: Why now? What is it
that changed that created the conditions for this outbreak? And we
don't have the answer to that. But certainly a viral mutation would
be one explanation," Harvell added.
The disease was first spotted in June 2013 and has shown no signs of
slowing.
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"There are 10 million viruses in a drop of seawater, so discovering
the virus associated with a marine disease can be like looking for a
needle in a haystack," Hewson said.
"Not only is this an important discovery of a virus involved in a
mass mortality of marine invertebrates, but this is also the first
virus described in a sea star."
Scientists prefer calling them sea stars rather than starfish
because they are not fish but rather echinoderms, cousins of sand
dollars, sea cucumbers and sea urchins. Most have five arms,
although some have more.
The disappearance of so many starfish threatens to disrupt coastal
ecosystems because they are important predators in the waters
between the shoreline and open sea, the researchers said.
(Reporting by Will Dunham; Editing by Sandra Maler)
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