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
Botryllus stewartensis
Brewin, 1958
(
Figure 10H
)
Botryllus stewartensis
Brewin 1958
, p 444
;
Kott 1990b
, p 286
and synonymy.
Distribution
Previously recorded (see
Kott 1990b
):
Western Australia
(
Albany
);
South Australia
(
Spencer
and
St Vincent Gulfs
); Victoria (
Ninety Mile Beach
,
Port Phillip Bay
); New
South Wales
(
Port Kembla
,
Port Stephens
,
Port Hacking
); Queensland (
Moreton Bay
);
New Zealand
(
South I.
and
Stewart I.
). New record:
South Australia
(
Edithburgh
,
3–4 m
,
SAM
E3289
)
.
Description
The newly recorded colonies are squat, sandy lobes (to
1 cm
high and
1 cm
diameter) on a basal mat. Each lobe contains a single common cloacal system consisting of a circle of zooids around a central common cloacal aperture. The zooids open from the upper flat surface, which is slightly depressed in the preserved colonies. The test is delicate and soft, and covered with sand, although sand is not present internally. Zooids are as previously described with about 10 rows of about 15 stigmata and three delicate internal longitudinal vessels running the length of the branchial sac. The ventral internal longitudinal vessel is close to the endostyle. A small, curved gastric caecum is at the pyloric end of the stomach.
Remarks
The species shows little variation, despite its wide geographic range. The height of the flattopped colony lobes does vary, sometimes reaching
3.5 cm
but their diameter is less variable, reaching only
1.5 cm
. The presence of a circular zooid system and the sandy external covering are characteristic. Other temperate species have a similar recorded range, across the southern Australian coast from Albany and up the eastern coast to Moreton Bay. However, the occurrence of the species in the South Island and Stewart I. (
New Zealand
) suggest a possible sub-Antarctic affinity.
Sandy species of the subfamily
Botryllinae
are unusual.
Botrylloides saccus
Kott, 2003
from Kangaroo I. has similar circular systems but small almost spherical colony lobes on short, thin stalks.
Botryllus purpureus
(
Oka, 1932
)
has encrusting colonies with sand embedded throughout the test. Other ascidian species with a similar distribution in temperate
Australia
and
New Zealand
are
Ascidiella aspersa
(
Mueller, 1776
)
,
Asterocarpa humilis
(
Herdman, 1899
)
,
Dumus areniferus
Brewin, 1952
,
Euclavella claviformis
(
Herdman, 1899
)
, and
Sigillina australis
Savigny, 1816
. Also, a few species groups and genera, namely the
pachydermatina
group (
Pyura
), certain
Polycarpa
spp.
(
P. zeleta
,
P. pegasus
, and
P. tinctor
and related species), some
Molgula
spp.
and
Hypsistozoa
spp.
, also indicate a biogeographic relationship between temperate Australian waters and
New Zealand
(see Kott forthcoming).