- Aoki, Lillian;
- Ritter, Carmen;
- Beatty, Deanna;
- Domke, Lia;
- Eckert, Ginny;
- Graham, Olivia;
- Gomes, Carla;
- Gross, Collin;
- Hawthorne, Timothy;
- Heery, Eliza;
- Hessing-Lewis, Margot;
- Hovel, Kevin;
- Koehler, Karl;
- Monteith, Zachary;
- Mueller, Ryan;
- Olson, Angeleen;
- Prentice, Carolyn;
- Rappazzo, Brendan;
- Stachowicz, John;
- Tomas, Fiona;
- Yang, Bo;
- Harvell, C;
- Duffy, J
Disease is a key driver of community and ecosystem structure, especially when it strikes foundation species. In the widespread marine foundation species eelgrass (Zostera marina), outbreaks of wasting disease have caused large-scale meadow collapse in the past, and the causative pathogen, Labyrinthula zosterae, is commonly found in meadows globally. Research to date has mainly focused on abiotic environmental drivers of seagrass wasting disease, but there is strong evidence from other systems that biotic interactions such as herbivory can facilitate plant diseases. How biotic interactions influence seagrass wasting disease in the field is unknown but is potentially important for understanding dynamics of this globally valuable and declining habitat. Here, we investigated links between epifaunal grazers and seagrass wasting disease using a latitudinal field study across 32 eelgrass meadows distributed from southeastern Alaska to southern California. From 2019 to 2021, we conducted annual surveys to assess eelgrass shoot density, morphology, epifauna community, and the prevalence and lesion area of wasting disease infections. We integrated field data with satellite measurements of sea surface temperature and used structural equation modeling to test the magnitude and direction of possible drivers of wasting disease. Our results show that grazing by small invertebrates was associated with a 29% increase in prevalence of wasting disease infections and that both the prevalence and lesion area of disease increased with total epifauna abundances. Furthermore, these relationships differed among taxa; disease levels increased with snail (Lacuna spp.) and idoteid isopod abundances but were not related to abundance of ampithoid amphipods. This field study across 23° of latitude suggests a prominent role for invertebrate consumers in facilitating disease outbreaks with potentially large impacts on coastal seagrass ecosystems.