Ascidian fauna (Tunicata, Ascidiacea) of subantarctic and temperate regions of Chile
Author
Turon, Xavier
Author
Cañete, Juan I.
Author
Sellanes, Javier
Author
Rocha, Rosana M.
Author
López-Legentil, Susanna
text
Zootaxa
2016
4093
2
151
180
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.4093.2.1
93e50923-ac4f-4bc5-93cc-4b1e825a8c1d
1175-5326
267667
ECC66298-6885-47B3-B797-8D30AA05927F
Ciona robusta
Hoshino & Tokioka, 1967
Fig. 7A
References and synonymy:
Ciona robusta
Hoshino & Tokioka (1967)
p. 276; Brunetti
et al.
(2015) p. 186;
Ciona intestinalis
type
A (Sato
et al.
2012) p. 1611.
FIGURE 6.
Synoicum georgianum
. A, colony; B, zooid; C, abdomen (stained material); D. transverse section at the stomach level. Scale bars: A, 1 cm, B, 1 mm, C, D, 0.5 mm.
FIGURE 7.
A,
Ciona robusta
on a buoy, note also some
Asterocarpa humilis
(orange-coloured).
Corella eumyota
. B, whole individual; C, dissected individual; D, right side of the mantle, branchial sac eliminated. Inset shows magnification of the zone of the genital openings. The specimen in C and D has been stained. Scale bars: A, 10 cm, B, 2 mm, C, D, 1 mm.
Localities: 2N, 3N,
6N.
Remarks.
the cosmopolitan taxon
Ciona intestinalis
has been recently shown to lump together several cryptic species, of which the most widespread is the so-called
Ciona intestinalis
type
A (Caputi
et al.
2007, Zahn
et al.
2010). Recent work (Brunetti
et al.
2015, Pennati
et al.
2015) has partially clarified the taxonomy of this species complex and has shown that
Ciona intestinalis
type
A is in fact
C. robusta
, a species described by Hoshino and Tokioka (1967) in
Japan
and later synonymized under
C. intestinalis
. The specimens observed had the diagnostic features of
C. robusta
(Sato
et al.
2012, Brunetti
et al.
2015), such as protuberances in the tunic near the siphons, and red pigment in the papillae at the distal end of the spermduct. The mitochondrial sequences obtained also confirm the identity of the Chilean specimens.
Ciona robusta
is an invasive species now established in northerncentral
Chile
and is expanding its distributional range (Madariaga
et al.
2014).