Ascidiacea (Tunicata) from deep waters of the continental shelf of Western Australia
Author
Kott, Patricia
text
Journal of Natural History
2008
2008-04-30
42
15 - 16
1103
1217
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00222930801935958
journal article
10.1080/00222930801935958
1464-5262
5219188
Styela clava
Herdman, 1881
Styela clava
Herdman 1881
, p. 70
.
Kott 1985
, p. 115
and synonymy.
Hewitt et al. 2002
. NBII National Biological Information Infrastructure) and ISSG (Invasive Species Specialist Group) 2006.
Distribution
Previously recorded (see
Kott 1985
;
Hewitt et al. 2002
, p.
NBII 2006
): In
Australia
, it has been found in Port Phillip Bay from the 1970s. New record:
Western Australia
CSIRO SS10/05 (Shark Bay, Stn
118, 100 m
, 07.12.05, QM G328137).
Originally recorded from the north-western Pacific the species has readily adapted to temperate locations in the northern and southern hemispheres to which it appears to have been introduced in the last half century.
Description
The single individual taken has a leathery, wrinkled test with longitudinal grooves. It is characteristically vertical, almost cylindrical, with both apertures close together and terminal. The gut loop is a simple vertical loop and there are eight longitudinal gonads on the left with the usual testis follicles in the body wall between the ovarian tubes.
Remarks
From its first recorded occurrence in
Australia
in the mid-1970s, this species has spread relatively slowly (see
Hewitt et al. 2002
, p.
NBII
(National Biological Information Infrastructure) and
ISSG
(Invasive Species Specialist Group), 2006), although the newly recorded colony from
Shark Bay
at
100 m
suggests that there may be populations established in south-western
Australia
. The new record is also significant in that it is the only occurrence recorded outside temperate waters
.