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Cionidae

Cionidae

GBIF:119396059

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Descriptions(1)

Cionidae

Ciona antarctica Hartmeyer, 1911 (Figure 10)

Hartmeyer, 1911: 471 pl. 52 fig.5. Monniot & Monniot 1983: 47 fig. 9A, B; 1994:15.

Station: 55.

The single specimen collected 9 cm in length and 3.5 cm in width has a transparent tunic. The basal part of the tunic is thicker, somewhat cartilaginous with superficial vascular ampullae. Both siphons are terminal, close to each other (Fig. 10 A, B). The body is contracted by 6 strong longitudinal muscular ribbons on each side (Fig. 10 A, B). There are 12 long oral tentacles. The dorsal tubercle opens in a C on the right. The peripharyngeal band has 2 blades. The rapheal languets are narrow and long. The branchial sac has finger-like papillae at the crossings of the longitudinal, transverse and parastigmatic vessels (Fig. 10 D). The digestive loop is located in totality under the branchial sac. The stomach is internally thinly plicated. The anus is multilobate. The gonads are included inside the gut loop (Fig. 10 C). On each side, between the gut and the body wall, in the posterior part of the body, a large organ protrudes, made of thick lobed lamellae of unknown function (Fig. 10 C).

No close hit in BOLD (best: 80.32% for C. intestinalis) for the sequence of specimen P1 CIO 80 (BOLD: ASCAN030-10).

The CEAMARC specimens correspond to previous descriptions. However, C. antarctica was rarely collected and only in two opposite areas of the Antarctic continent: the Antarctic Peninsula and Terre Adélie down to 500 m.

Tylobranchion speciosum Herdman, 1886 (Figure 11)

Herdman, 1886: 157. Monniot & Monniot 1983: 50 and synonymy; 1994:15. Tatian et al. 1998: 149. Tatian et al. 2005: 210. Primo & Vazquez 2007: 1795.

Stations (events when several trawling operations per station): 11(424)-62.

Most of the material is damaged. One colony is intact, triangular with an expanded upper part containing the thoraces of the zooids narrowing progressively to a thin peduncle (Fig. 11 A). The tunic, when fixed, is perfectly transparent and colourless. All siphon rims are damaged. The branchial sac is wide with 15 to 17 rows of numerous stigmata. Long bifid papillae arise from the transverse vessels (Fig. 11 B). The stigmata rows have no parastigmatic vessels. The stomach wall has an average of 8 folds. The rectum is particularly wide along the whole thorax length. The gonads are located immediately under the gut loop and sometimes overlapping it. They are composed of numerous testis vesicles and a central ovary. The post-abdomens extend the whole length of the colony.

No close hit in BOLD (best: 79.9%) for the sequence of specimen P1 TYL 27 (BOLD: ASCAN021-10).

T. speciosum is eurybathic and widely distributed in the Antarctic and Sub-Antarctic areas.

Monniot, Françoise, Dettai, Agnès, Eleaume, Marc, Cruaud, Corinne, Ameziane, Nadia (2011): Antarctic Ascidians (Tunicata) of the French-Australian survey CEAMARC in Terre Adélie. Zootaxa 2817: 1-54, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.277174MagnoliaPress via PlaziNo known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.

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FIGURE 10. Ciona Antarctica: A, B, both sides of the body removed from the tunic, scale bar = 2 cm; C, detail of the gonad and parietal organ; D, part of the branchial sac.

Imageimage/png© Monniot, Françoise;Dettai, Agnès;Eleaume, Marc;Cruaud, Corinne;Ameziane, NadiaMonniot, Françoise;Dettai, Agnès;Eleaume, Marc;Cruaud, Corinne;Ameziane, Nadia

FIGURE 11. Tylobranchion speciosum: A, colony, scale bar = 1 cm; B, part of the branchial sac.

Imageimage/png© Monniot, Françoise;Dettai, Agnès;Eleaume, Marc;Cruaud, Corinne;Ameziane, NadiaMonniot, Françoise;Dettai, Agnès;Eleaume, Marc;Cruaud, Corinne;Ameziane, Nadia

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Source Information

Antarctic Ascidians (Tunicata) of the French-Australian survey CEAMARC in Terre Adélie

checklist

This dataset contains the digitized treatments in Plazi based on the original journal article Monniot, Françoise, Dettai, Agnès, Eleaume, Marc, Cruaud, Corinne, Ameziane, Nadia (2011): Antarctic Ascidians (Tunicata) of the French-Australian survey CEAMARC in Terre Adélie. Zootaxa 2817: 1-54, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.277174

Abstract

A large collection of ascidians was made during the CEAMARC Aurora Australis V 3 cruise off Terre Adélie and George V Land a region rarely investigated before at these depths. Sampling was performed by beam trawls and a dredge between 138°– 146° latitude East and from 150 to 1700 m depth, on the Antarctic shelf and slope. Three of the 33 ascidian species identified are new and belong to the Stolidobranchia. Half of the species have an exclusive Antarctic distribution, others also occur in Sub-Antarctic areas, but none are common with the southern temperate fauna. The CEAMARC collection does not contain the whole range of already known species from this region. Moreover, brittle and very small specimens were not collected. COI sequences were obtained for 37 specimens, including two of the new species.

Key words: Ascidians, Antarctic, Terre Adélie, New species

Monniot F, Dettai A, Eleaume M, Cruaud C, Ameziane N, plazi (2011). Antarctic Ascidians (Tunicata) of the French-Australian survey CEAMARC in Terre Adélie. Plazi.org taxonomic treatments database. Checklist dataset https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.277174 accessed via GBIF.org on 2026-06-15.

CC0Published 12/31/2011View dataset
GBIF Usage Key
119396059
Dataset Key
18da0afb-302a-4912-9e86-fbbdebc414a6
Origin
source
Backbone Key
9281
Taxon ID
03B887B6FFBDFFCFFF62169FFB3FFD50.taxon
Last Crawled
6/11/2026
Last Interpreted
6/11/2026