Diane S. Littler
Diane Scullion Littler is an American marine botanist and phycologist, known for her extensive research on marine algae, particularly in tropical reef ecosystems, often in partnership with her late husband, Mark M. Littler. Throughout her career, which had spanned over three decades, she has made significant contributions to the taxonomy, ecology, and physiology of macroalgae worldwide. The Littlers have authored over 195 publications, including peer-reviewed journals and field guides, alongside her husband. She has held research positions at the Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institute, the Florida Atlantic University, the University of California, Irvine, the University of Hawaii, and the Smithsonian Institution. She is also a member of the Phycological Society of America, International Society for Reef Studies, and the European Phycology Society.
Life
Early life and education
Diane S. Littler was born in 1945. As a child, she excelled at golf and often explored the forests near Salem, Ohio. As a result, she had an appreciation for nature early on in her life. As she matured, she initially pursued a career in forest ecology,taking an interest in terrestrial ecosystems. She had attended Ohio University, where she met Mark, her future husband and research partner, while he was a teaching assistant for the phycology class she was taking. Influenced by Mark, she expanded her interest in forest ecology to include aquatic ecosystems, specifically seaweeds. After her marriage to Mark, they both attended the University of Hawaii, where they both benefitted from the institution's in-depth curriculum in marine algal ecology. While there, she was trained under a renowned oceanographer, Max Doty. She had earned her Bachelor's of Science while studying there. After earning her Bachelor's degree, she obtained both her Master's and Doctorate degrees, focusing on the function of morphology of marine algae at the Pacific Western University in 1982.Career
Littler first began her career as a scientist under renowned oceanographer Max Doty at the University of Hawaii, alongside her late husband, Mark M. Littler. Together, they learned more about coral reef ecology and state-of-the-art research methods and approaches to research. She then went on to co-direct large ecological research programs that specifically focused on rocky intertidal ecosystems at the University of California, Irvine. She held the position of senior scientist, later adjunct senior scientist, with the Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institution at the Florida Atlantic University prior to joining the Smithsonian Institution in 1982, where she is now a research associate. She and Mark began to work with their colleague Barrett Brooks, and formed a deep-sea research team certified to dive to depths of 65 meters, allowing flexibility in terms of research, documentation, and exploration of life in remote and diverse habitats. For example, she and her team have conducted a survey along the Moroccan coast to determine if the funding from the International Finance Corporation of the World Bank towards a new algal harvesting industry was feasible. Since then, her scientific career has been marked with over 2,000 ship-based scuba excursions across global coral reef ecosystems and oceanographic cruises to conduct effective and efficient surveys in remote regions.Research and contributions
Relative dominance model and theory
Co-developed with Mark M. Littler, this model assesses how different types of sessile photosynthetic organisms dominate coral reef systems, depending on nutrient levels, herbivore activity, physical disturbances, and external impacts such as pollution and overfishing. This model has been a cornerstone in reef biogenesis and management.Marine algal functional morphology and evolution
Marine algal functional morphology and evolution is a field pioneered by Diane S. Littler, which examines the relationsihp between the structural form and traits of benthic macroalgae influence and their ecological performance in marine environments. Her research established a cost-benefit model that links algal thallus architecture to key functions such a photosynthesis, nutrient absorption, and defense against herbivory. Her research demonstrated that variations in algal form – ranging from filamentous to and calcified types – correlate with survival strategies, productivity, and competitive interactions across reef ecosystems. Building on this framework, both Diane and Mark demonstrated that macroalgal form groups are strongly correlated with substratum stability and disturbance regimes, showing that delicate, fast-growing forms dominate unstable habitats while tougher, slow growing morphologies thrive in stable environments. These findings have been the foundation in understanding the algal roles in coral reef resilience, biodiversity, and ecosystems shifts driven by top-down and bottom-up forces.Deep-sea discovery
Purple coralline algae
In a deep-sea excursion near the Bahamas, Littler and Mark M. Littler discovered a community of macroalgae thriving at record depths of 884 feet – far below the previously accepted photosynthetic limit of 700 feet. The discovery of a purple coralline algae surviving on 0.0005% of surface sunlight challenged textbook assumptions about the light requirements for marine plant life. Their findings sparked interdisciplinary research across oceanography, geology, and marine biology. The discovery of this purple coralline algae has been featured and published in textbooks and scientific literature, opening a new frontier in biological oceanography.Giant ''Anadyomene''
2009, Diane and Mark, along with divers Barrett Brooks, Cameron Brooks, Antonio Baeza, and Carla Piantoni, had identified a previously undocumented green alga species, Anadyomene sp. nov., off the coast of Belize. This species had formed an expansive net of five meters long, which was previously was not recorded in the year prior. This species closely resembled a rare Floridian species of A. pavonina. It has been previously noted that species in the Anadyomene genus were known to form individual clumps, but the unidentified species they found had displayed higher resistant to marine life grazing. They has observed that this species is the most abundant at depths of 25 to 50 kilometers deep, and that only four percent of Anadyomene was consumed compared to Acanthophora spicifera being 77 percent consumed, which supports the high resistant to marine grazing''.''Biotic-reef pathology
Coralline-Lethal Orange Disease
In 1995, Diane and Mark documented and researched the impact of Coralline-Lethal Orange Disease, a cyanobacterial pathogen that is responsible for widespread coral mortality throughout the Pacific Reefs. This bacterium was first observed at Cook Islands in 1993, but it has since spread to the South Pacific reefs over a range of 6,000 kilometers. The presence of CLOD in the Great Astrolabe Reef had exponentially increased from 0% to full saturation by 1993. Due to this, CLOD is a significant threat to coral reef ecosystems and their structural integrity as this bacterial pathogen targets coralline algae.Harmful algal blooms
In 2006, the Littler's examined how herbivorous fishes in coral reef systems play an ecological role, emphasizing their function in macroalgal proliferation and the maintenance of coral dominance. They noted that overfishing or habitat degradation can lead to reduced herbivory, which in turn contributes to the proliferation of microorganisms that promote coral diseases. These external factors contribute to biotic-reef pathology by facilitating microbial dysbiosis, increasing coral susceptibility to pathogens, and reinforcing negative feedback loops that slow down reef recovery.Inventory and survey programs
Diane's team has biodiversity inventories over the years of their research. One of the earliest inventories at a sanctuary based in Looe Key National Marine, Key West, Florida, allowed for significant legal retributions for any damages to seaweed-dominated reef habitats. She and her team also contributed to the development of standardized large-scale monitoring methods used by federal and state agencies such as the Bureau of Land Management, the Office of Water Resources Research, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the National Science Foundation, the State of Hawaii, the National Park Service, and the National Oceanographic and Minerals Management Service.Conservation efforts
Saba Bank Atoll
The Saba Bank Atoll, located in the Atlantic Ocean, is considered the largest underwater atoll. This atoll is located in the Caribbean Netherlands, and northeast of the island of Saba. The Saba Bank Atoll was noted for its biodiversity for macroalgae found in the Caribbean by Mark M. Littler during a two-week research dive. Diane led a three-person diving team, herself included. During the two-week expedition, they collected over 300 macrophyte specimens, among which 12 are believed to be previously undocumented species. The team also identified three novel macroalgal communities. The discovery of previously undocumented species of fish and seaweed, led to the recognition of the Saba Bank Atoll as a biodiversity 'hot spot'. In addition to this, two novel species of goby fish were observed and discovered as the Saba Bank Atoll was not extensively researched prior. Due to the discovery of novel specimens, the atoll was seen to be a 'hot spot'. The researchers and divers from Conservation International, the Netherlands Antilles government, and the Smithsonian Institution's Museum of Natural History, as well as local fishermen have advocated for more protection of the Saba Atoll as it is endanger due to large maritime vessels that avoid fees by waiting at the atoll which then causes damages to the reef.Molasses Reef
The Littler's and their research team played an important role in assessing reef damage caused by the grounding of freighter Wellwood. Molasses Reef in Key Largo, Florida, as requested by the National Marine Sanctuaries Program under the NOAA. Their rapid-response study was able to aid in obtaining over $22 million in restitution, more than $3,000 per square meter of impacted reef. Restoration to Molasses Reef began in May of 2002 and ended in August of 2007.Taxonomic contributions
A
Anadyomene gigantodictyon- Anadyomene howei
- Anadyomene lacerata
- Anadyomene linkiana
- Avrainvillea digitata
- Avrainvillea fenicalii
- Avrainvillea fulva
- Avrainvillea hayi
- Avrainvillea rotumensis
- Avrainvillea silvana
- Avrainvillea sylvearleae
H
- Halimeda floridiana
- Halimeda pumila
- Halimeda pygmaea
P
- Protohalimedaceae
R
- Rhipidosiphon floridensis
T
- Taonia abbottiana
U
- Udotea abbottiorum
- Udotea caribaea
- Udotea dixonii
- Udotea dotyi
- Udotea fibrosa
- Udotea goreaui
- Udotea looensis
- Udotea luna
- Udotea norrisii
- Udotea unistratea
Awards and recognition
- Guinness World Record for Deepest Plant found in 1984
- Gerald W. Prescott Prize in 2002
- Scientific Diving Lifetime Achievement Award in 2003
- Women's Diver Hall of Fame in 2010
Publications
- Littler, Mark M., Littler, Diane S. The American Naturalist 116.1
- Littler, MM, Martz, DR, Littler, DS Marine Ecology Progress Series 11
- Littler, Mark M., Littler, Diane S., Taylor, Phillip R. Journal of Phycology 19.2
- Littler, Mark M., Taylor, Phillip R., Littler, Diane S. Coral Reefs 2.2
- Littler, Mark M., Littler, Diane S. Journal of Phycology 19.4
- Littler, Mark M., Littler, Diane S. Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology 74.1
- Littler, Mark M., Taylor, Phillip R., Littler, Diane S., Sims, R. H., Norris, James N. Atoll Research Bulletin 289
- Littler, Mark M., Littler, Diane S., Blair, Stephen M., Norris, James N. " Science 227.4682
- Jensen, Paul R., Gibson, Robert A., Littler, Mark M., Littler, Diane S. " Deep Sea Research Part A. Oceanographic Research Papers 32.4
- Taylor, Phillip R., Littler, Mark M., Littler, Diane S. " Oecologia 69.4
- Littler, Mark M., Littler, Diane S., Blair, Stephen M., Norris, James N. " Deep Sea Research Part A. Oceanographic Research Papers 33.7
- Littler, Mark M., Taylor, Phillip R., Littler, Diane S. Coral Reefs 5.2
- Littler, Mark M., Taylor, Phillip R., Littler, Diane S., Sims, R. H., Norris, James N. Atoll Research Bulletin 302
- Littler, Mark M., Littler, Diane S., Taylor, Phillip R. " Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology 105.2-3
- Paul, Valerie J., Littler, Mark M., Littler, Diane S., Fenical, William Journal of Chemical Ecology 13.5
- Macintyre, Ian G., Graus, Richard R., Reinthal, Peter N., Littler, Mark M., Littler, Diane S. Coral Reefs 6.1
- Lapointe, Brian E., Littler, Mark M., Littler, Diane S. Aquatic Botany 28.3-4
- Hanisak, M. D., Littler, M. M., Littler, D. S. Marine Biology 99.2
- Littler, M. M., Taylor, P. R., Littler, D. S. Oecologia 80.3
- Kilar, John A., Littler, Mark M., Littler, Diane S. Journal of Phycology 25.4
- Littler, Mark M., Littler, Diane S. In Thirteenth International Seaweed Symposium, Springer Netherlands
- Hanisak, M. Dennis, Littler, Mark M., Littler, Diane S. In Thirteenth International Seaweed Symposium, Springer Netherlands
- Littler, D.S., Littler, M.M. British Phycological Journal 25.1
- Littler, D. S., Littler, M. M. Phycologia 29.2
- Hanisak, M. Dennis, Littler, Mark M., Littler, Diane S. Hydrobiologia 204-205.1
- Littler, Mark M., Littler, Diane S. Hydrobiologia 204-205.1
- Littler, Diane S., Littler, Mark M. Journal of Phycology 27.1
- Littler, Mark M., Littler, Diane S., Dennis Hanisak, M. Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology 150.2
- Littler, M. M., Littler, D. S., Titlyanov, E. A. Coral Reefs 10.4
- Littler, Mark M., Littler, Diane S. Atoll Research Bulletin 374
- Lapointe, Brian E., Littler, Mark M., Littler, Diane S. Estuaries 15.1
- Littler, D. S., Littler, M. M. Phycologia 31.5
- Littler, M. M., Littler, D. S. Coral Reefs 13.4
- Littler, Mark M., Littler, Diane S. Biologie in unserer Zeit 24.6
- Littler, Mark M., Littler, Diane S., Macintyre, Ian G., Brooks, Barrett L., Taylor, Phillip R., Lapointe, Brian E. Atoll Research Bulletin 428
- Littler, Diane S., Littler, Mark M., Brooks, Barrett L. Atoll Research Bulletin 429
- Macintyre, Ian G., Littler, Mark M., Littler, Diane S. Atoll Research Bulletin 430
- Littler, Mark M., Littler, Diane S. Science 267.5202
- Littler, Mark M., Littler, Diane S., Taylor, Phillip R. Ecology 76.5
- Littler, M. M., Littler, D. S. " Coral Reefs 14.3
- Littler, Mark M., Littler, Diane S. Science 270.5238
- N'Yeurt, Antoine D. R., Littler, Diane S., Littler, Mark M. Phycological Research 44.2
- Gacia, E., Littler, M.M., Littler, D.S. Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology 204.1-2
- Mateo, M.A., Romero, J., Pérez, M., Littler, M.M., Littler, D.S. Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science 44.1
- Littler, M. M., Littler, D. S., Brooks, B. L., Koven, J. F. " Coral Reefs 16.1
- Littler, M.M., Littler, D.S. " Coral Reefs 17.2
- Gacia, E, Littler, M.M, Littler, D.S Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science 48.6
- Littler, Mark M., Littler, Diane S. Ecology 80.5
- Littler, M.M., Littler, D.S. " Coral Reefs 18.2
- Littler, M.M., Littler, D.S. " Coral Reefs 18.2
- Littler, M.M., Littler, D.S. "" Coral Reefs 18.3
- Macintyre, Ian G., Goodbody, I., Rützler, Klaus, Littler, Diane S., Littler, Mark M. Atoll Research Bulletin 467
- Littler, Diane S., Littler, Mark M., Brooks, Barrett L. " Atoll Research Bulletin 474
- Littler, M. M., Littler, D. S. Coral Reefs 19.3
- Littler, Mark M., Littler, Diane S. Atoll Research Bulletin 494.7
- Littler, Mark M, Littler, Diane Scullion "Waterways & Byways Of The Indian River Lagoon: Field Guide For Boaters, Anglers & Naturalists" OffShore Graphics, Inc.
- Littler, Diane Scullion, Littler, Mark M "South Pacific Reef Plants: A Divers' Guide To The Plant Life Of South Pacific Coral Reefs" Offshore Graphics, Inc.
- Littler, Mark M., Littler, Diane S., Brooks, Barrett L. " Atoll Research Bulletin 515
- Lapointe, Brian E., Barile, Peter J., Yentsch, Charles S., Littler, Mark M., Littler, Diane S., Kakuk, Brian Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology 298.2
- Littler, Diane S., Littler, Mark M., Macintyre, Ian G., Bowlin, Emily, Andres, Miriam S., Reid, R. Pamela Atoll Research Bulletin 532
- Lapointe, Brian E., Barile, Peter J., Littler, Mark M., Littler, Diane S. Harmful Algae 4.6
- Lapointe, Brian E., Barile, Peter J., Littler, Mark M., Littler, Diane S., Bedford, Bradley J., Gasque, Constance Harmful Algae 4.6
- Littler, M. M., Littler, D. S., Brooks, B. L. Coral Reefs 24.4
- Littler, M. M., Littler, D. S., Lapointe, B. E., Barile, P. J. Coral Reefs 25.2
- Littler, M.M., Littler, D.S., Brooks, B.L., Lapointe, B.E. " Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology 336.2
- Littler, Mark M., Littler, Diane S., Brooks, Barrett L. " Harmful Algae 5.5
- Littler, Mark M., Littler, Diane S. Aquatic Conservation: Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems 17.2
- Verbruggen, Heroen, Leliaert, Frederik, Maggs, Christine A., Shimada, Satoshi, Schils, Tom, Provan, Jim, Booth, David, Murphy, Sue, De Clerck, Olivier, Littler, Diane S., Littler, Mark M., Coppejans, Eric Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 44.1
- Lapointe, B. E., Bedford, B. J., Littler, M. M., Littler, D. S. " Coral Reefs 26.3
- Littler, M. M., Littler, D. S., Brooks, B. L., Lapointe, B. E. " Coral Reefs 26.4
- Littler, M. M., Littler, D. S. Coral Reefs 27.3
- Littler, Mark M., Littler, Diane S., Brooks, Barrett L. In Proceedings of the Smithsonian Marine Science Symposium, Smithsonian Institution Scholarly Press
- Verbruggen, Heroen, Ashworth, Matt, LoDuca, Steven T., Vlaeminck, Caroline, Cocquyt, Ellen, Sauvage, Thomas, Zechman, Frederick W., Littler, Diane S., Littler, Mark M., Leliaert, Frederik Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 50.3
- Demes, Kyle W., Littler, Mark M., Littler, Diane S. Aquatic Botany 92.2
- Littler, Mark M., Littler, Diane S., Brooks, Barrett L. Harmful Algae 9.3
- Littler, Mark M., Littler, Diane S., Brooks, Barrett L. PLoS ONE 5.5
- Littler, Mark M., Littler, Diane S. " Journal of Phycology 46.3
- Littler, Mark M., Littler, Diane S. " In Encyclopedia of Modern Coral Reefs, Springer Netherlands
- Littler, Mark M., Littler, Diane S. In Encyclopedia of Modern Coral Reefs, Springer Netherlands
- Littler, Mark M., Littler, Diane S. In Encyclopedia of Modern Coral Reefs, Springer Netherlands
- Littler, Mark M., Littler, Diane S. In Encyclopedia of Modern Coral Reefs, Springer Netherlands
- Littler, Mark M., Littler, Diane S. Journal of Phycology 48.1
- Littler, Mark M., Littler, Diane S. In Research and Discoveries: The Revolution of Science through Scuba, Smithsonian Institution Scholarly Press
- Littler, Mark M., Littler, Diane S. In Research and Discoveries: The Revolution of Science through Scuba, Smithsonian Institution Scholarly Press
- Littler, Mark M., Littler, Diane S. In Research and Discoveries: The Revolution of Science through Scuba, Smithsonian Institution Scholarly Press