Observations on non-didemnid ascidians from Australian waters (1)
Author
Kott, Patricia
text
Journal of Natural History
2006
2006-04-26
40
3 - 4
169
234
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00222930600621601
journal article
10.1080/00222930600621601
1464-5262
5232431
Polycarpa procera
(
Sluiter, 1885
)
Styela procera
Sluiter 1885
, p 196
.
Polycarpa procera
:
Kott 1985
, p 196
and synonymy.
Distribution
Previously
recorded (see
Kott 1985
):
Western Australia
(
Cape Jaubert
,
Shark Bay
,
Cockburn Sound
);
South Australia
(
Upper Spencer Gulf
);
Victoria
(
Ninety Mile Beach
,
Bass Strait
,
Warnambool
);
New
South Wales
(
Byron Bay
);
Queensland
(
Maroochydore
,
Hervey Bay
,
Gladstone
,
southern Great Barrier Reef
,
Innisfail
);
Indonesia, Singapore, Sri Lanka
,
Japan
.
New
records:
Queensland
(17.165–17.935
°
S, 146.535–146.8
°
E,
35–68 m
)
.
Remarks
The species is plentiful in inter-reefal locations in northeastern Queensland and a wide range in the Indo-West Pacific between
Japan
in the north to
Sri Lanka
and around the southern coast of the Australian continent. The species range supports the view that the Australian continental shelf acts as a bridge for gene flow between the tropics and temperate regions.
Externally the species resembles
Polycarpa chinensis
(
Tokioka, 1967
)
which has a similar range and habit to the present species. Both have a test brittle with embedded sand, more or less sessile apertures, rootlets on the ventral surface and the gut usually forming a simple arc between the posterior oesophagus to the base of the atrial aperture. However, the branchial sac of
P. procera
has distinct folds with up to 26 internal longitudinal vessels on each fold and at least seven, but sometimes many more between the folds; and it lacks the dorsal gonads and has lobes only on one lip of the bilabiate anal border.
Polycarpa chinensis
has dorsal gonads as well as ventral ones, both lips of the anal border are lobed, and its branchial folds are low, each having only four or five vessels and only one or two vessels are between the folds (see
Kott 1985
). These two species are difficult to distinguish externally and often are sympatric.