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2021 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Craig Dahlgren ◽  
Valeria Pizarro ◽  
Krista Sherman ◽  
William Greene ◽  
Joseph Oliver

Coral reefs of Grand Bahama and New Providence islands in The Bahamas have been surveyed several times over the past decade, and long-term monitoring indicates declines in coral cover associated with hurricanes, bleaching events, and local threats. However, the greatest declines in coral populations in The Bahamas over the past decade may be attributed to the recent introduction of stony coral tissue loss disease (SCTLD). In 2019, a comprehensive assessment of both islands was conducted using Atlantic and Gulf Rapid Reef Assessment (AGRRA) methods to characterize reefs before SCTLD was reported in The Bahamas. Following reports of SCTLD in late 2019, timed roving diver assessments of corals were conducted for Grand Bahama in March 2020 and New Providence in June 2020 to determine which species were affected by the disease and the proportion of corals that were healthy, infected with SCTLD, and those that appeared to have experienced recent mortality for the most abundant intermediate or highly susceptible species. Additional surveys were conducted for both islands in January 2021 to further assess the extent of the outbreak, and repeated assessments of several sites for each island were used to determine the impact of the disease on corals over the previous 6.5 to 10.5 months. Infection rates varied among species following patterns described for Florida and elsewhere, with higher infection rates occurring in vulnerable species for both Grand Bahama and New Providence. Pseudodiploria strigosa appears to be the most affected species with 45.6% of colonies on Grand Bahama infected and 23.1% infected on New Providence and recent mortality rates of 31.5 and 42.7%, respectively, at the time of surveys. Spatial patterns of mortality and infection rates for the most vulnerable species were greatest close to international commercial shipping ports on both islands, suggesting SCTLD has been present in those locations for a longer time, and the proportion of healthy colonies increased with distance from the port. For Grand Bahama, there was also a significant effect of depth, with shallow reefs having a higher proportion of colonies that was infected or experienced recent mortality. For New Providence, sites to the east of the port saw a sharp decline in infection and mortality rates with distance compared to sites west of the port, where nearly the entire coastline was affected by SCTLD. Temporal analyses showed an increase in recent mortality and a decrease in active infection for most species on both islands, but little change in the proportion of healthy corals, suggesting some degree of resistance to the disease. Because Freeport and Nassau are the two largest container ports in The Bahamas and are over 200 km apart with multiple islands between them where SCTLD has not yet been reported, it is probable that SCTLD arrived in The Bahamas via commercial shipping, followed by rapid spread within islands via local currents and other vectors. Results from this study stress the need for early detection and suggest that preventing the spread of the disease between islands via vessel traffic is of utmost importance.


2021 ◽  
Vol 3 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Adedayo M. Awoniyi ◽  
Andrew Thompson ◽  
Luther Ferguson ◽  
Melony Mckenzie ◽  
Fabio N. Souza ◽  
...  

AbstractRats are invasive pest species that commonly infest low-income urban environments. Their association with humans constitutes a threat of rodent-borne disease transmission. We evaluated the outcome of a chemical and sanitary intervention on rat sightings in seven low-income urban settlements of New Providence, the Bahamas. The intervention consisted of rodenticide application, education about environmental sanitation, and improvement in waste disposal. Rat sightings were systematically recorded by trained staff before and three months after the intervention. The intervention slightly decreased rat sightings, with an average of 2.7-fold with varied effectiveness across locations. Four out of seven locations (57%) registered a decrease in rat sightings. Our results suggest that social and environmental differences among communities may be responsible for the mixed efficacy observed in the current rodent management practice in urban communities of the Bahamas. However, a new set of control measures needs to be developed for areas where rodent decline was not observed. This study provides novel data on how rat population behaves post-intervention in a unique ecological setting like the Bahamas, presenting an informed judgment for their management, especially in the event of a natural disaster.


2020 ◽  
pp. 35-43
Author(s):  
Charles D. Ross

This chapter describes the steamship service of the two cities after the British mail steamer Karnak made its way from New York to Nassau for the first time. It argues that the establishment of such a regular link with the outside world had been a high priority for the British officials and the contract meant that Bahamians would finally have a regular connection to both North America and Europe. When Prince Alfred paid his visit to New Providence in December 1861, Acting Governor Charles Rogers Nesbitt wrote an official welcome in which he referred to the Bahamas as “this remote western maritime colony.” The chapter offers a glance at the Bahamas' place in world history, and investigates how Bahamians were displayed as opportunistic people of the sea who embraced everything associated with a maritime lifestyle. But unless there were goods on a wrecked ship to pilfer, there was not much to do.


2020 ◽  
Vol 27 (2) ◽  
pp. 137-146
Author(s):  
Scott Johnson ◽  
William K. Hayes

Sexual dimorphism in animals exists in many forms, including overall size difference between the sexes (sexual size dimorphism, SSD) and size and structural differences in body components (sexual body component dimor­phism, SBCD). Studies of sexual dimorphism seek to determine whether dimorphic traits result from sexual selection, natural selection, or non-adaptive processes. Characterizing sexual dimorphism depends on identifying an unbiased character for overall body size, which can then be used to assess both SSD and SBCD. Most studies of snakes use snout-vent length (SVL) for this purpose, but SVL may itself be dimorphic. In this study, we examined SSD and SBCD in three island populations of the Bahamian Racer (Cubophis vudii vudii). Discriminant function analysis (DFA) showed that head width (females wider) and tail length (males longer) best discriminated between the sexes, and total length provided the least discrimination. Linear models using total length as the least-biased measure for overall size revealed an absence of SSD, but SBCD existed for head size (width 8.9% greater in females, length similar), trunk length (4.3% longer in females), and tail length (9.8% longer in males). Linear models also revealed differences among island populations for total length (New Providence < Eleuthera = Allen Cay) and head length (Allen Cay < Eleuthera < New Providence), but not head width or tail length. Extent of SBCD varied depending on choice of character to control for overall body size, with total length yielding the most female-biased values, and geometric mean, principal component 1 (PC1) of a principal components analysis, and SVL providing increasingly more male-biased values, respectively. Body condition was statistically similar for the two sexes and three seasons (spring, summer-fall, winter), but the mod­erate and large effect sizes, respectively, suggest that females were heavier than males, and both sexes were heaviest in spring. Females, which represented 64.9 of all snakes, suffered injuries disproportionately to males (19.7% and 3.1%, respectively), but no differences in sex ratio or frequency of injury existed among the island populations. Collectively, these findings illustrate the utility of using DFA and other approaches (geometric mean, PC1) to identify a relatively unbiased reference character for overall body size and suggest that sexual and natural selection interact to shape the morphology of these snakes.


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