Coral affected by Stony Coral Tissue Loss Disease

Active Ocean Pandemic

Stony Coral
Tissue Loss
Disease

The most lethal coral disease ever recorded is spreading across the Caribbean. Over 30 species. More than 25 nations. No known cure. PIMS is on the frontlines.

30+

Species of reef-building coral affected

25+

Caribbean nations and territories infected

2014

First identified off the coast of Miami, Florida

100%

Mortality rate in many affected species

Understanding the Threat

An ocean pandemic
hiding in plain sight

Stony Coral Tissue Loss Disease is not like other coral diseases. It is faster, more lethal, and more indiscriminate than anything marine scientists have encountered. Since its discovery off the coast of Miami in 2014, SCTLD has radiated across the Caribbean at astonishing speed, killing corals that took centuries to grow in a matter of weeks.

The disease targets the foundation species of Caribbean reefs: brain corals, pillar corals, star corals, and others that form the structural backbone of reef ecosystems. When these species die, the entire reef community collapses. Fish lose their habitat. Shorelines lose their protection. Fisheries lose their nursery grounds. Tourism economies lose their primary attraction.

Brain coral with active SCTLD white lesion spreading across the colony

A brain coral in The Bahamas showing the characteristic white lesion of SCTLD. PIMS scientists applied white antibiotic paste along the lesion margins to stop the disease’s progression. Left untreated, it kills tissue faster than the coral can recover, leaving bare skeleton behind.

Research published in Science (2025), co-authored by PIMS Executive Director Dr. Craig Dahlgren and scientist Maya Gomez, found that SCTLD combined with the 2023 marine heat wave has pushed Florida’s elkhorn and staghorn corals to functional extinction.

Across The Bahamas, PIMS surveys have documented SCTLD on reefs in New Providence, Grand Bahama, Abaco, The Exumas, Eleuthera, and more. The disease continues to spread to new sites. Without intervention, the ecological and economic consequences will be measured in generations, not years.

Read the full study: Functional extinction of Florida’s reef-building Acropora following the 2023 marine heat wave  |  PIMS coverage

A Decade of Devastation

How SCTLD
swept the Caribbean

2014

First Detection

An unknown disease appears on coral reefs off the coast of Miami, Florida. Initial reports describe rapid tissue loss across multiple species simultaneously. Nothing like this has been seen before.

2019-20

SCTLD Hits The Bahamas. PIMS Mobilizes.

SCTLD is confirmed on reefs in New Providence. PIMS co-founds the Bahamas SCTLD Task Force and immediately begins reef surveillance and disease monitoring across the archipelago. The response starts the same year the disease arrives.

2021

Treatment and Training Begin

PIMS launches antibiotic treatment training workshops in partnership with Nova Southeastern University, teaching divers and government officials to apply life-saving antibiotic paste to infected corals. PIMS research reveals commercial shipping as a likely vector for SCTLD spread in The Bahamas. National Geographic features the crisis.

2022-23

Expanding the Fight. The Heat Wave Hits.

PIMS partners with the Cayman Islands to extend monitoring regionally. Treatment teams race to save corals around Cat Island and document SCTLD advancing north through Andros. Then an unprecedented marine heat wave compounds the crisis. Florida’s elkhorn and staghorn corals, already weakened by SCTLD, are pushed to functional extinction.

2024

A New Approach: CORDAP Award

PIMS receives the CORDAP award to develop and test coral probiotic treatments, a fundamentally new approach to combating SCTLD. Instead of treating individual corals with antibiotics, the probiotic method aims to give entire reef communities the beneficial bacteria they need to resist infection.

2026

First Field Trials: San Andres, Colombia

PIMS scientists conduct the first in-situ field trials of coral probiotics on Caribbean reefs. In San Andres Island, Colombia, beneficial bacteria isolated from disease-resistant corals are applied directly to infected reef sites. Three key species tested across two experimental runs. The disease has reached 25+ nations, but for the first time, science has a promising scalable tool to fight back.

Brain coral showing SCTLD tissue loss in The Bahamas
PIMS diver applying antibiotic treatment to SCTLD-infected brain coral
PIMS scientist treating massive brain coral with SCTLD
PIMS scientist applying coral probiotic enclosure to reef in San Andres Colombia

PIMS scientists treating SCTLD-infected corals in The Bahamas and conducting probiotic field trials in San Andres, Colombia.

On the Frontlines

How PIMS is
fighting SCTLD

PIMS has been fighting SCTLD since the disease first arrived in The Bahamas. As a founding member of The Bahamas SCTLD Task Force, we mobilized a response in 2020, the same year the disease was confirmed on New Providence reefs. By 2021, we were running antibiotic treatment training workshops with Nova Southeastern University, teaching government officials, dive professionals, and partner organizations to apply life-saving antibiotic paste directly onto infected coral colonies.

That work has never stopped. Our scientists have treated corals from Cat Island to Andros, trained government divers from the Department of Marine Resources and Department of Environmental Protection, partnered with the Cayman Islands to extend monitoring regionally, and published research identifying commercial shipping as a likely disease vector. Through the Bahamas Coral Innovation Hub at Atlantis, the Coral Gene Bank, and the Reef Rescue Network, we are simultaneously preserving genetic material, developing coral resilience strategies, and restoring reef areas that SCTLD has degraded.

In 2026, we took the fight international, conducting the first in-situ probiotic field trials in San Andres Island, Colombia, while continuing treatment and monitoring operations across The Bahamas. This is not a new effort. PIMS has been on the frontlines for over six years.

Surveillance

Regular reef surveys across New Providence, Grand Bahama, Abaco, and Eleuthera tracking SCTLD spread and reef health indicators.

Treatment

Antibiotic paste applied directly to infected corals by trained divers. Government officials and partners certified through PIMS training programs.

Genetic Preservation

The Coral Gene Bank at Atlantis preserves genetic material from disease-resistant colonies for future restoration.

Restoration

Through the Reef Rescue Network, outplanting thousands of corals to help SCTLD-degraded ecosystems recover.

A Potential Breakthrough

Coral
Probiotics

In March 2026, PIMS scientists traveled to San Andres Island, Colombia to conduct the first in-situ field trials of a promising new line of defense: beneficial bacteria isolated from disease-resistant corals.

Close-up of probiotic syringe delivering beneficial bacteria into coral enclosure during SCTLD field trials in Colombia

San Andres Island, Colombia. March 2026. A probiotic solution containing beneficial bacteria is injected into a specialized enclosure holding the treatment against the coral colony during the first in-situ field trials.

The approach is elegantly simple in concept: isolate beneficial bacteria from corals that have survived SCTLD, culture them in a lab, then apply them directly to infected reef sites using specialized enclosures that hold the probiotics in contact with coral colonies long enough to colonize and protect them.

Funded by CORDAP and conducted in collaboration with Ushijima Lab, GW Lab, Blue Indigo Foundation, EcoMares NGO, and CORPCORALINA, the trials tested three key reef-building coral species across two experimental runs. The most promising treatment was then applied to prioritized reef sites.

It is early days, but this work represents the first time a probiotic treatment has been tested in the field on Caribbean reefs. If it works at scale, it could change the trajectory of this crisis entirely.

Read more: CORDAP Award: Combatting SCTLD in San Andres Island with Probiotics

See the Science

Watch and Learn

Protecting Bahamian Reefs: Identifying and Preventing SCTLD

How to Identify SCTLD in the Field

Tips for Identifying SCTLD Underwater

Tracking the Spread of SCTLD

More from us and our partners

Take Action

What you can do
right now

Whether you are a diver, boater, scientist, or someone who cares about the ocean, you can help.

Report Sightings

If you see corals with white lesions or tissue loss, report it to PIMS. Include photos and GPS coordinates. Early detection saves reefs.

Disinfect Your Gear

Limit disease transmission by disinfecting bilge water and dive/snorkel gear between sites using a mild bleach solution or hydrogen peroxide-based disinfectant.

Share and Educate

Download the resources above and share them with your dive club, marina, tourism operators, and networks. Awareness is the first line of defense.

Fund the Research

Donate to PIMS. Your contribution directly funds reef surveys, antibiotic treatments, probiotic research, and the scientists working to save Caribbean coral reefs before it is too late.

Report a Sighting

Seen something
on the reef?

If you have observed corals showing signs of tissue loss in The Bahamas, your report could help us respond before the disease spreads further. Every sighting matters.

Submit a Report