Distaplia occidentalis Bancroft, 1899
Common name(s): Mushroom ascidian
|
Synonyms: |
|
Phylum Chordata
Subphylym Urochordata
Class
Ascidiacea
Order Enterogona
Suborder Aplousobranchia
Family Clavelinidae |
Distaplia occidentalis from about 20
m depth, Sares Head, WA.
The attachment stalk is at the bottom. |
(Photo by: Dave Cowles,
July 2006) |
Description:
This compound tunicate (many
individuals are embedded in a common tunic) grows in a globular
(sometimes
flat) mass with a short, narrow attachment stalk. The
colonies are
not encrusted with sand. The pharynx of individuals has 4
rows of
stigmata.
Colored from pale orange to yellow to pink to dark purplish-red or
brown.
Most colonies are less than 2 cm in diameter, though they can be larger
as here (up to 10 cm). Each of the closely packed zooids has
its
own incurrent siphon and pharynx, but several adjacent zooids share a
slightly
raised common buccal or excurrent siphon and atrial cavity.
How to Distinguish from
Similar Species:
Several species of similar shape are often sand-encrusted and have 5 or
more rows of stigmata. Distaplia
smithi, which lives on the open coast, is a cluster of
leaflike
lobes. Of the other common, smooth orange local
tunicates, Metandrocarpa
taylori is a social ascidian in which
individuals live near
each other and are often connected with narrow stolons or sheets of
tunic
but are not enclosed within the same lump of tunic. Cnemidocarpa
finmarkiensis is a solitary tunicate with a very
smooth, shiny
tunic.
Geographical Range:
Vancouver Island,
Canada to San Diego, CA
Depth Range:
Intertidal to 15 m
Habitat:
Protected floats and pilings,
subtidal on rocks with good current, among surfgrass roots, open coast.
Biology/Natural History:
Spawns April
to late August. Each zooid produces 2-4 sausage-shaped eggs,
which
are retained in a brood pouch of the atrial cavity until the tadpole
larva
stage. Larve are released mainly in the morning.
Hermaphroditic.
References:
Dichotomous Keys:
Flora
and Fairbanks, 1966
Kozloff
1987, 1996
Smith
and Carlton, 1975
General References:
Carefoot,
1977
Gotshall,
1994
Harbo,
1999
Johnson
and Snook, 1955
Kozloff,
1993
Morris
et al., 1980
Scientific
Articles:
Watanabe, H. and C.C. Lambert,
1973. Larva
release in response to light by the compound ascidians Distaplia
occidentalis and Metandrocarpa
taylori. Biological Bulletin 144:
556-566
Web sites:
General Notes and
Observations: Locations, abundances,
unusual behaviors:
Each individual has its own separate incurrent (oral) siphon but the
excurrent (buccal) siphon is shared by several adjacent
individuals.
This closeup shows the arrangement of individuals.
Authors and Editors of Page:
Dave Cowles (2006): Created original page
|