AnimaliaNot EvaluatedacceptedspeciesAccepted
Pyura haustor

Pyura haustor

(Stimpson, 1864)

GBIF:159167942

0year

ABOUT

Descriptions(1)

Figure 12 D IHAK 12 BHAK 0610, 0611, 0612 UF 2467, 2468, 2469. Common in the low intertidal under rocks by lab, small. IHAK 31 BHAK 1696 UF 2520. Triquet Island Macro site, Scuba, 8 m. Tiny, on Pugettia richii. This leathery solitary stolidobranch can be very variable in shape, and so confusing to determine if all the variants are the same species that Ritter (1909) undertook a detailed internal and external examination of many specimens in southern California to determine what he called the “ law and order ” (!) that delimits a species, long before genetic sequencing was possible. He separated one variant as P. johnsoni (Ritter, 1909), but this species was later synonymized by Van Name (1945). Specimens may attain a height of more than 5 cm not including the length of the siphons. The reddish brown tunic is very tough and irregularly rugose, the long tubular siphons at the anterior end are divergent, and there are sharply pointed siphonal spines (Van Name 1945; Lambert 2019). The pharyngeal sac contains six folds per side. There is great variability in the number of the branched oral tentacles, with southern California specimens having up to 42 while northern Washington and British Columbia specimens averaging about half that number. See Van Name (1945) for a detailed morphological description. Distribution: Alaska to southern California (Van Name 1945; O’Clair & O’Clair 1998; Lamb & Hanby 2005) and the Galápagos (Lambert 2019). In the present study only small specimens were collected, mostly under rocks near the marine station.
Lambert, Gretchen (2019): The Ascidiacea collected during the 2017 British Columbia Hakai MarineGEO BioBlitz. Zootaxa 4657 (3): 401-436, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4657.3.1

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FIGURE 12.A–D: Pyuridae; E, F: Molgulidae.A: Halocynthia aurantium 10 cm in length; B: Halocynthia igaboja; C: Boltenia villosa; D: Pyura haustor; E: Molgula pacifica whole animal left side, tunic removed; F: M. pacifica close-up of siphons. Scale bars: B, 5 mm; C, 5 mm; D, 5 mm; E, 1.6 mm.

Imageimage/png© Lambert, GretchenLambert, Gretchen

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Source Information

The Ascidiacea collected during the 2017 British Columbia Hakai MarineGEO BioBlitz

checklist

This dataset contains the digitized treatments in Plazi based on the original journal article Lambert, Gretchen (2019): The Ascidiacea collected during the 2017 British Columbia Hakai MarineGEO BioBlitz. Zootaxa 4657 (3): 401-436, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4657.3.1

Abstract

A three-week intensive marine biodiversity survey was carried out at a small remote region of the central British Columbia coast at and near the Calvert Island Marine Station (Hakai Institute) July 21–August 11, 2017. The survey included daily sampling by the staff and a number of visiting taxonomists with specialties covering all the major groups of invertebrates. Many marine habitats were sampled: rocky and sand/gravel intertidal and tidepools, eelgrass meadows, shallow and deeper subtidal by snorkel and Scuba, plus artificial surfaces including the sides and bottom of the large floating dock at the Institute and settlement plates set out up to a year previously at various subtidal sites. Many new species were recorded by all the taxonomists. In this very biodiverse remote area 36 ascidian species were identified: 18 Aplousobranchia, 7 Phlebobranchia, and 11 Stolidobranchia, comprising a total of 15 solitary and 21 colonial species including two undescribed colonial species. This represents almost one third of all the known North American species from Alaska to southern California in this limited very remote area. Remarkably, only two are possible non-natives. Diplosoma listerianum (Milne-Edwards, 1841), was collected mostly on natural substrates including deeper areas sampled by Scuba, and one colony occurred on a settlement plate. A few Ciona savignyi Herdman, 1882 were collected, two from natural substrates and four from artificial surfaces. There were no botryllids, Styela clava Herdman, 1881, Didemnum vexillum Kott, 2002, or Molgula manhattensis (De Kay, 1843), though these are all common and sometimes very abundant non-natives in other parts of BC and along much of the U.S. west coast. Most of the species encountered are known in northern California, Washington, and southern BC, but only a small number are represented among the few known Alaska species.

Lambert G, plazi (2019). The Ascidiacea collected during the 2017 British Columbia Hakai MarineGEO BioBlitz. Plazi.org taxonomic treatments database. Checklist dataset https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4657.3.1 accessed via GBIF.org on 2026-06-14.

CC0Published 8/20/2019View dataset
GBIF Usage Key
159167942
Dataset Key
3414318d-7570-49ac-9013-be4e1f1e6347
Origin
source
Backbone Key
2331828
Taxon ID
6A2E3761A92AFFDD1390FD1ADFCBFAA9.taxon
Last Crawled
6/10/2026
Last Interpreted
6/10/2026