Rosenberg Institute Seminar Series - Melanie Prentice
Overview
Melanie Prentice, Research Scientist, Hakai Institute
The causative agent of sea star wasting disease
Abstract: Beginning in 2013, sea star wasting disease (SSWD) swept the Pacific Coast of North America, devastating sunflower sea star (Pycnopodia helianthoides) populations from Mexico to Alaska by more than 90%. The rapid disappearance of P. helianthoides further contributed to a trophic cascade involving unchecked population growth of their sea urchin prey which then overgrazed kelp forests, contributing to the decline of this critical ecosystem along the coast. Key to the recovery of P. helianthoides and the kelp forest ecosystems reliant on them, is the identification of the pathogen responsible for causing SSWD. In this talk we present data leveraged from controlled challenge experiments and natural field outbreaks of SSWD to identify Vibrio pectenicida strain FHCF-3 as a causative agent of this disease in P. helianthoides.
Bio: Melanie Prentice (she/her) is a Research Scientist at the Hakai Institute. Her research experience spans diverse species, ecosystems and questions, coalescing on the use of genetic and genomic tools to provide scientific guidance for the management of species and ecosystems at risk. Her most recent work employs controlled challenge experiments and genomic datasets to improve our understanding of wildlife epidemiology. Proficient in bioinformatics, Microsoft Excel is her mortal enemy.
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