AnimaliaNot EvaluatedacceptedspeciesAccepted
Diplosoma listerianum

Diplosoma listerianum

(Milne-Edwards, 1841)

GBIF:159167984

0year

ABOUT

Descriptions(1)

Figure 4 A – C IHAK 17 C BHAK 0639 UF 2490. South end of West Beach. On carapace and legs of spider crab Scyra acutifrons Dana, 1851. IHAK 23 BHAK 1685 UF 2515. Kelpie Point, 15 m, Scuba. Tan colony on Scyra acutifrons. IHAK 31 BHAK 1693 Triquet Island Macro site, Scuba, 8 m. On Scyra acutifrons. IHAK 31 BHAK 1694 on spider crab Pugettia richii. IHAK 36 A BHAK 1704 West Beach Nero Site, shallow Scuba to 5 m. On red crab Pugettia foliata (Stimpson, 1860). IHAK 43 Triquet, shallow Scuba, 5 m. On unidentified crab. IHAK 55 BHAK 1735 UF 2546. Kwakshua Petroglyph Cliff, Scuba, 17 – 20 m depth, vertical rock wall, high current. IHAK 60 BHAK 3242 UF 2561. Scuba, 17 – 20 m depth, on bryozoan. More white pigment granules in tunic than other samples. Zooids with more black pigment. With two lamellariids Marsenina rhombica (Dall, 1871), UF Mollusca 511737. IHAK 60 BHAK 3244 UF 2562. Scuba, 17 – 20 m depth. Large tan colony, growing on seaweed. XHAK 11 BHAK 3122 UF 2559. On ARMS plate, thin large tan colony. Small colonies were collected on the legs and carapace of every spider crab Scyra acutifrons that was collected, an association also reported by Lamb & Hanby (2005), as well as on a Pugettia foliata (Stimpson, 1860) and a P. richii. One large tan colony occurred on an ARMS plate, and several were collected by Scuba from vertical rock walls and on various algal species. Two color morphs of D. listerianum were collected; in both types the tunic was colorless. One morph had zooids with varying amounts of black pigment on the thorax and abdomen; the other morph contained tan zooids with very sparse or no black pigment. No D. listerianum was collected on the laboratory floating dock; the only artificial substrate was the single colony on a settlement plate. No larvae were observed. This species is actually a species complex, thus the worldwide distribution and possible native ranges are not well understood. It has been considered introduced or cryptogenic in most if not all of the locations where it has been collected (Rocha & Kremer 2005). North American specimens occur from Alaska to southern California, Mexico, and Panama on the Pacific side, and from eastern Canada to Florida and Panama on the Atlantic side (Van Name 1945 as D. macdonaldi Herdman, 1886; Lamb & Hanby 2005; Carman et al. 2011; Ma et al. 2018).
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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Media Files(1)

FIGURE 4. Aplousobranchia, Didemnidae. A–C: Diplosoma listerianum. A: colony on Scyra acutifrons; B, C: close-ups of zooids from two different color morphs. D–F: Trididemnum alexi. D: colony on living scallop; E: same colony closeup with amphipod Polycheria osborni burrowed into tunic surface; F: tunic spicules. Scale bars:A, 1 cm; B, 1.5 mm; C, 1.3 mm; D, 1.6 cm; E, 3.2 mm; F, 35 µm. Photos B and D by G. Paulay.

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 2026-06-15.

CC0Published 8/20/2019View dataset
GBIF Usage Key
159167984
Dataset Key
3414318d-7570-49ac-9013-be4e1f1e6347
Origin
source
Backbone Key
5200414
Taxon ID
6A2E3761A934FFCD1390F9D8D95CFE95.taxon
Last Crawled
6/10/2026
Last Interpreted
6/10/2026