Patterns of spread of coral disease in the Florida Keys James W. PorterPhillip DustanMel Parsons OriginalPaper Pages: 1 - 24
White-band disease and the changing face of Caribbean coral reefs Richard B. AronsonWilliam F. Precht OriginalPaper Pages: 25 - 38
Quantitative assessment of coral diseases in the Florida Keys: strategy and methodology D.L. SantavyE. MuellerJ. Campbell OriginalPaper Pages: 39 - 52
Yellow band and dark spot syndromes in Caribbean corals: distribution, rate of spread, cytology, and effects on abundance and division rate of zooxanthellae J. CervinoT. J. GoreauR. Hayes OriginalPaper Pages: 53 - 63
Stony coral diseases observed in southwestern Caribbean reefs J. Garzón-FerreiraD.L. Gil-AgudeloS. Zea OriginalPaper Pages: 65 - 69
Integrating microbiological, microsensor, molecular, and physiologic techniques in the study of coral disease pathogenesis Laurie L. RichardsonGarriet W. SmithRichard G. Carlton OriginalPaper Pages: 71 - 89
Laboratory models for the study of coral pathologies Erik P. ScullyJames PrappasGary K. Ostrander OriginalPaper Pages: 91 - 95
Coral bleaching and disease: contributors to 1998 mass mortality in Briareum asbestinum (Octocorallia, Gorgonacea) Drew HarvellKiho KimGarriet Smith OriginalPaper Pages: 97 - 104
Characterization of Aspergillus sydowii (Thom et Church), a fungal pathogen of Caribbean sea fan corals Alisa P. AlkerGarriet W. SmithKiho Kim OriginalPaper Pages: 105 - 111
Microbial disease causation in marine invertebrates: problems, practices, and future prospects Kim B. RitchieShawn W. PolsonGarriet W. Smith OriginalPaper Pages: 131 - 139
Seasonal and interannual cycles of endemic cholera in Bengal 1891–1940 in relation to climate and geography Menno Jan BoumaMercedes Pascual OriginalPaper Pages: 147 - 156
Vibrio cholerae in recreational beach waters and tributaries of Southern California Sunny C. Jiang OriginalPaper Pages: 157 - 164
Occurrence and distribution of the human pathogen Vibrio vulnificus in a subtropical Gulf of Mexico estuary Erin K. LippCesar Rodriguez-PalaciosJoan B. Rose OriginalPaper Pages: 165 - 173
Enteroviruses detected by reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction from the coastal waters of Santa Monica Bay, California: low correlation to bacterial indicator levels Rachel T. NobleJed A. Fuhrman OriginalPaper Pages: 175 - 184
Demographic, landscape, and meteorological factors controlling the microbial pollution of coastal waters Michael A. MallinScott H. EnsignPatricia K. Fowler OriginalPaper Pages: 185 - 193
Modeling studies of the effect of climate variability on MSX disease in eastern oyster (Crassostrea virginica) populations Eileen HofmannSusan FordJohn Klinck OriginalPaper Pages: 195 - 212
How are climate and marine biological outbreaks functionally linked? Marshall L. HayesJoseph BonaventuraRichard T. Barber OriginalPaper Pages: 213 - 220
Mycoses in red snapper (Lutjanus campechanus) caused by two deuteromycete fungi (Penicillium corylophilum and Cladosporium sphaerospermum)* R. B. BlaylockR. M. OverstreetM. A. Klich OriginalPaper Pages: 221 - 228