Journal of Marine Science and Engineering (Jun 2021)

A Review of Marine Viruses in Coral Ecosystem

  • Logajothiswaran Ambalavanan,
  • Shumpei Iehata,
  • Rosanne Fletcher,
  • Emylia H. Stevens,
  • Sandra C. Zainathan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse9070711
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 7
p. 711

Abstract

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Coral reefs are among the most biodiverse biological systems on earth. Corals are classified as marine invertebrates and filter the surrounding food and other particles in seawater, including pathogens such as viruses. Viruses act as both pathogen and symbiont for metazoans. Marine viruses that are abundant in the ocean are mostly single-, double stranded DNA and single-, double stranded RNA viruses. These discoveries were made via advanced identification methods which have detected their presence in coral reef ecosystems including PCR analyses, metagenomic analyses, transcriptomic analyses and electron microscopy. This review discusses the discovery of viruses in the marine environment and their hosts, viral diversity in corals, presence of virus in corallivorous fish communities in reef ecosystems, detection methods, and occurrence of marine viral communities in marine sponges.

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