{"id":948,"date":"2025-08-04T15:00:00","date_gmt":"2025-08-04T15:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/audiomateria.com\/?p=948"},"modified":"2025-08-08T19:12:15","modified_gmt":"2025-08-08T19:12:15","slug":"a-wasting-disease-killed-millions-of-sea-stars-after-years-of-searching-scientists-just-found-a-cause","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/audiomateria.com\/index.php\/2025\/08\/04\/a-wasting-disease-killed-millions-of-sea-stars-after-years-of-searching-scientists-just-found-a-cause\/","title":{"rendered":"A wasting disease killed millions of sea stars. After years of searching, scientists just found a cause."},"content":{"rendered":"
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\n\tAdult sunflower sea stars feeding on mussels at UW Friday Harbor Laboratories. The stars suck out and ingest the soft tissues of mussels, then discard the shells, which collect at the bottom of the tank. The sea star on the bottom, \u201cCharlotte,\u201d is the mother of the lab\u2019s stars grown in captivity.\t<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

\u201cIt was like a battleground,\u201d Drew Harvell remembers. \u201cIt was really horrible.\u201d<\/p>\n

She\u2019s reflecting on a time in December 2013, on the coast of Washington state, when she went out at low tide and saw hundreds of sick, dying sea stars. \u201cThere were arms that had just fallen off the stars,\u201d she says. \u201cIt was really like a bomb had gone off.\u201d<\/p>\n

The stars were suffering from something known as sea star wasting disease. It\u2019s a sickness that sounds like something out of a horror movie: Stars can develop lesions in their bodies. Eventually, their arms can detach and crawl away from them before the stars disintegrate completely.  <\/p>\n

Harvell is a longtime marine ecologist whose specialty is marine diseases. And she was out for this low tide in 2013 because a massive outbreak of this seastar wasting had started spreading up and down the West Coast \u2014 from Mexico to Alaska \u2014 ultimately affecting around 20 distinct species of sea stars and wiping out entire populations in droves<\/a>. In the decade since, some species have been able to bounce back<\/a>, but others, like the sunflower sea star, continue to struggle. In California, for example, sunflower stars have almost completely died out<\/a>.<\/p>\n

The question in 2013 was: What, exactly, was killing all these stars? While marine ecologists like Harvell could recognize the symptoms of seastar wasting, they weren\u2019t actually sure what was causing the disease. From the very beginning, though, it was something they wanted to figure out. And so, soon after the outbreak started, they collected sea stars to see if they could find a pathogen or other cause responsible for the wasting. The hunt for the culprit of this terrible, mysterious disease was on. <\/p>\n

Unfortunately, it was not straightforward.  <\/p>\n

\u201c\u200aWhen this disease outbreak happened, we knew quite little about what was normal [in sea stars],\u201d says Alyssa Gehman, who is also a marine disease ecologist. She says that when researchers are trying to do similar work to chase down a pathogen in, say, humans, they have an enormous trove of information to draw on about what bacteria and viruses are common to the human body, and what might be unusual. Not so for sea stars. \u201c\u200aWe maybe had a little bit of information, but absolutely not enough to be able to really tease that out easily.\u201d<\/p>\n

Also, Gehman says, there can be a lag before the disease expresses itself, so some stars have the pathogen that caused the disease, but don\u2019t present with symptoms yet, making it harder for scientists to even distinguish between sick stars and healthy ones as they run their tests. <\/p>\n

So even though a research team identified a virus that they thought might be associated with the wasting disease<\/a> as early as 2014, over time, it became clear that it was most likely not<\/em> the culprit, but rather just a virus present in many sea stars. <\/p>\n

\u201cThe results were always confusing,\u201d Harvell remembers.<\/p>\n

In the decade since the initial mass outbreak, other researchers have proposed other theories, but none have brought them to a definitive answer either. And yet, it became increasingly clear that an answer was needed, because people started to realize just how important the sunflower stars they had lost really were. <\/p>\n

\u201c\u200aWe actually learned a lot from losing so many of these animals at once,\u201d Gehman says. <\/p>\n

Before the outbreak, she says, they\u2019d known that sunflower stars \u2014 giant sea stars that can be the size of dinner plates, or even bike tires<\/a> \u2014 were skillful hunters and voracious eaters. They even knew that many things on the seafloor would run away from them. Gehman remembers taking a class on invertebrates back in college, where she learned that if you put even just the arm<\/em> of a sunflower star in a tank with scallops, \u201cthe tank would explode with scallops swimming everywhere trying to get away.\u201d <\/p>\n

But all that fearsome hunting was, it seems, pretty key to ecosystem health. In many places, she says, \u201c\u200aafter the sea sunflower stars were lost, the urchin populations exploded.\u201d <\/p>\n

And so the die-off of the sunflower star and the explosion of urchins has been connected to the collapse of the Northern California kelp forests<\/a>, a marine ecosystem that provides a home for a rich diversity of species. <\/p>\n

A cross-state, cross-organizational partnership between the Nature Conservancy and a variety of research institutions<\/a> is working hard to breed sunflower seastars in captivity in the hopes that they can be reintroduced to the coast and reassume their role in their ecosystems. But as Harvell remembers, she and Gehman knew that no recovery project would be successful if they couldn\u2019t find the cause of sea star wasting disease.<\/p>\n

\u201cYou\u2019re not gonna be able to get these stars back in nature if you don\u2019t know what’s killing them,\u201d she says. <\/p>\n

So in 2021, as part of the larger partnership, Harvell and Gehman, along with a number of their colleagues, launched into an epidemiological detective project. Their quest: to finally pin down the cause of seastar wasting disease. <\/p>\n

\u201cReally the work over the four years was done in the trenches by Dr. Melanie Prentice and Dr. Alyssa Gehman,\u201d Harvell says, \u201cand then one of my students, Grace Crandall.\u201d<\/p>\n

It was an emotionally difficult project because it required Gehman and her colleagues to deliberately infect many stars with the disease. <\/p>\n

\u201cIt feels bad,\u201d she admits, and they would be open about that in the lab, \u201cbut we also can remember that we’re doing this for the good of the whole species.\u201d <\/p>\n

That work has paid off, though, and now, after four years of research, they\u2019ve nailed their culprit in a paper out in Nature Ecology & Evolution <\/em>today<\/a>.\u00a0<\/p>\n

What follows is a conversation with Drew Harvell, edited for clarity and length, about what she and her collaborators found, how marine ecologists do this kind of detective work, and what identifying the culprit could mean for the future health of seastars.<\/p>\n

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How did you start the journey to figure out what actually had happened?<\/strong><\/p>\n

Well, we chose to work with the sunflower star because we knew it was the most susceptible and therefore was going to give us the most clear-cut results.  So we set up at Marrowstone Point<\/a>, which was the USGS Fisheries virus lab [in Washington state], because that would give us the proper quarantine conditions and lots of running seawater.<\/p>\n

The proper quarantine conditions \u2014 what does that mean?<\/strong><\/p>\n

All of the outflow water has to be cleansed of any potential virus or bacterium, and so all of the water has to be run through virus filters and also actually bleached in the end, so that we’re sure that nothing could get out. <\/p>\n

We did not want to do this work at our lab, Friday Harbor Labs, or at any of the Hakai labs in Canada because we were really worried that if we were holding animals with an infectious agent in our tanks without really stringent quarantine protocols, that we could be contributing to the outbreak.<\/p>\n

So you have these sea stars. They’re in this quarantined environment. What is the methodology here? What are you doing to them or with them?<\/strong><\/p>\n

\u200aSo the question is: Is there something in a diseased star that’s making a healthy star sick? And that’s like the most important thing to demonstrate right from the beginning \u2014 that it is somehow transmissible. <\/p>\n

And so Melanie and Alyssa early on showed that even water<\/em> that washed over a sick star would make healthy stars sick, and if you co-house them in the same aquarium, the healthy ones would always get sick when they were anywhere near or exposed to the water from a diseased star.<\/p>\n

There’s something in the water.<\/strong><\/p>\n

That\u2019s right. There\u2019s something in the water. But they wanted to refine it a little bit more and know that it was something directly from the diseased star. And so they created a slurry from the tissues of the disease star and injected that into the healthy star to be able to show that there really was something infectious from the disease star that was making the healthy star sick and then die.<\/p>\n

And then you control<\/em> those kinds of what we call \u201cchallenge experiments\u201d by inactivating in some way that slurry of infected disease stuff. And in this case, what they were able to do was to \u201cheat-kill\u201d [any pathogens in this slurry] by heating it up. And so the thing that was very successful right from the beginning was that the stars that were infected with a presumptive disease got sick and died, and the controls essentially stayed healthy.<\/p>\n

You do that control to make sure that it’s not like\u2026injecting a slurry into a star is what makes them sick?<\/strong><\/p>\n

That\u2019s right. And you\u2019re also having animals come in sick, right? So you want to know that they weren\u2019t just gonna get sick anyway. You want to be sure that it was what you did that actually affected their health status. <\/p>\n

So you have a slurry \u2014 like a milkshake of sea star \u2014 and you know that within it is a problematic agent of some kind. How do you figure out what is in that milkshake that is the problem?<\/strong><\/p>\n

The real breakthrough came when Alyssa had the idea that maybe we should try a cleaner infection source and decided to test the coelomic fluid, which is basically the blood of the star. With a syringe, you can extract the coelomic fluid of the sick star and you can also heat-kill it, and you can do the same experiment challenging with that. And it was a really exciting moment because she and Melanie confirmed that that was a really effective way of transmitting the disease because it’s cleaner.<\/p>\n