Pelagic tunicates in the China Seas
Author
Franco, P.
Author
Dahms, H. - U.
Author
Lo, W. - T.
Author
Hwang, J. - S.
text
Journal of Natural History
2017
2017-03-27
51
15 - 16
917
936
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00222933.2017.1293180
journal article
10.1080/00222933.2017.1293180
1464-5262
5180954
Ihlea punctata
Morphology
Aggregate form with a thin and fusiform test. Body shape oval to cylindrical. Aggregate form with two rows of pigment spots at each side, from the endostyle to the ventral body surface. Six muscle bands are continuous dorsally but interrupted ventrally. MI–
MII
unite mid-dorsally, making a group of four muscle bands with MIII and MIV. MV and MVI are united mid-dorsally as well. Ventrally, the muscle bands are asymmetrical. Distinct dextral and sinistral individuals depend on the same morphology. Intestine is coiled. Ovary and embryo are situated on right side between MV and MVI. Solitary form has a thin test which is loosely attached to the body wall. Nine wide body muscles cover almost the whole body. A variable number of body muscles fuse in the mid-dorsal region. Except MVIII all of them are completely continuous around the body. The dorsal tubercle is a short straight stick. The stolon is tightly coiled underneath the nucleus. The length of the aggregated form can be up to
23 mm
and the length of the solitary form can reach up to
71 mm
(authors’ personal observations;
Marine Species Identification Portal 2017
).
Biogeography
Cosmopolitan, eurythermal species of temperate and tropical waters, absent from the Red Sea and the subtropical South Pacific Ocean. Epipelagic, living between the surface and about
150 m
water depth. It does not migrate vertically. Although
Ihlea punctata
has a wide distribution, it is one of the less common salpids (WoRMS
Editorial Board 2017
).