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Biol Bull 173: 557-562. (December 1987)
© 1987 Marine Biological Laboratory
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EELGRASS WASTING DISEASE: CAUSE AND RECURRENCE OF A MARINE EPIDEMIC

FREDERICK T. SHORT 1, LISA K. MUEHLSTEIN 2, and DAVID PORTER 2

1 Jackson Estuarine Laboratory, University of New Hampshire, RED 2, Adams Point, Durham, New Hampshire 03824
2 Department of Botany, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia 30602

Eelgrass populations are currently infected with a disease that produces symptoms and epidemiology reminiscent of the famous eelgrass wasting disease of the 1930s. This disease virtually eliminated eelgrass (Zostera marina L.) in the North Atlantic for three decades. For 50 years scientists have speculated about the cause of the 1930s eelgrass decline. We have now proven that the causal organism of the present epidemic is a pathogenic strain of Labyrinthula, which was suspected, but never conclusively shown to cause the 1930s wasting disease. We have isolated the infectious form of Labyrinthula from eelgrass from Maine to North Carolina on the Atlantic coast, and from Puget Sound on the Pacific coast; disease-related dieoffs of eelgrass beds are confirmed in Maine, New Hampshire, and Massachusetts.

Submitted on August 31, 1987
Accepted on September 29, 1987




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