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Distaplia skoogi

Distaplia skoogi

Michaelsen, 1924

GBIF:119508109

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Distaplia skoogi Michaelsen, 1924

(Figure 27A)

Distaplia domuncula Michaelsen, 1923: 15 fig. 3; Millar, 1955: 187 fig. 15.

Distaplia skoogi Michaelsen, 1924:331 nom nov for D. domuncula Michaelsen 1923, South Africa. Millar 1962: 150 fig. 18. South Africa. Monniot & al 2001: 34 fig. 2C, 18A–C, South Africa

Stations. TR 7 (MNHN A3 DIS 102). TA 60 (MNHN A3 DIS 103).

The colony of st. TR 7 is made of 2 pedunculate lobes erect and close together on the substrate; the largest has a head 2.5cm wide on a stem 2.5 cm long. Circular systems occupy the whole colourless head. The peduncle wears some epibionts. The tunic is hard, cartilaginous. The thoraces (Fig. 27A) have a large languet. The brancial sac has parastigmatic vessels. The gut loop is widely opened, the stomach is long with longitudinal internal folds (Fig. 27A). A large pyloric ampulla lies in the gut loop. The gonads hang in a pouch behind the abdomen (Fig. 27A). Only immature larvae are present free in the tunic; an empty incubatory pouch can be seen in some zooids.

Another colony, 5cm long with a head 2.7cm wide, collected in st. TA 60 has the same aspect but is of a deep blue in formalin. All anatomic characters are the same as in colourless sample. The brooding pouch contains one larva. This sample is provisionally placed in the same species.

Distaplia skoogi was only reported from South Africa

Monniot, Françoise (2012): Some ascidians from the southern coast of Madagascar collected during the “ AtimoVatae ” survey. Zootaxa 3197: 1-42, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.246182MagnoliaPress 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 27. A, Distaplia skoogi zooid and detail of another zooid. B, Distaplia stylifera, abdomen of a zooid. Scale bars A = 1 mm. B = 0.5 mm.

Imageimage/png© Monniot, FrançoiseMonniot, Françoise

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Source Information

Some ascidians from the southern coast of Madagascar collected during the “ AtimoVatae ” survey

checklist

This dataset contains the digitized treatments in Plazi based on the original journal article Monniot, Françoise (2012): Some ascidians from the southern coast of Madagascar collected during the “ AtimoVatae ” survey. Zootaxa 3197: 1-42, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.246182

Abstract

Surveys of littoral invertebrates along the southern coast of Madagascar have produced the first study of ascidians in this part of the Indian Ocean. Collections were made by SCUBA divers in May and June 2010 down to 25m depth. This region is considered the southern limit for coral reefs but remains diverse biologically. Upwellings and an abundant plankton community particularly favour the abundance of ascidians in this area. Of the 39 species of non-didemnid species described here, eight are new. Ten species are common to South Africa. Other species were for the most part already known from the Mozambique Channel and a few have also been recorded in the western Pacific (either cosmopolitan or introduced).

Key words: Ascidians, Madagascar, systematics, new species

Monniot F, plazi (2012). Some ascidians from the southern coast of Madagascar collected during the “ AtimoVatae ” survey. Plazi.org taxonomic treatments database. Checklist dataset https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.246182 accessed via GBIF.org on 2026-06-14.

CC0Published 12/31/2012View dataset
GBIF Usage Key
119508109
Dataset Key
4c036a63-9718-48de-97a2-f29c5976eb99
Origin
source
Backbone Key
2331277
Taxon ID
3055E11FFF8FFFB171A5C98DFC9C6BAA.taxon
Last Crawled
6/11/2026
Last Interpreted
6/11/2026