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Pterygascidia mirabilis

Pterygascidia mirabilis

Sluiter, 1904

GBIF:2331217

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Species Profile

Habitat

Marine

ABOUT

Descriptions(3)

Description. In life, photographed specimens that appear to be of this species (although they were not collected) are upright, pale blue, translucent and they appear to be turgid (pers. com. Karen Sanamyan) Individuals are solitary, up to 15 cm long, the upper half a long, vertical, soft, oval head and the lower half a thick cylindrical stalk attached basally to a hard substrate (rock or pebble) by a small tuft of roots. The whole body, including the stalk is encased in thin, transparent test. The upper half of the individual contains the main body of the organism, consisting of a large branchial sac with the gut embedded in the pallial body wall to the left of the dorsal mid line. The gut forms a gentle vertical J-shaped arc extending from the oesophageal opening at the posterior end of the branchial sac to within about one third of the body length of the atrial aperture. The branchial aperture is terminal and is on a conspicuous terminal branchial siphon with its dorsal wall produced forward into a recurved hood-like structure that directs the opening toward the substrate. A large bilobed flap of test protrudes between the branchial and atrial openings and two smaller lobes project from behind the atrial siphon. A narrow projection from the body wall at the posterior end of the head extends down to the base of the stalk. In these specimens the stalk is collapsed, flattened and wrinkled and blood vessels were not detected in it. It is not clear how the turgor of the stalk is maintained in the living organism and the only available explanation is that it may be a positive pressure in the haemocoele of the stolonial extension. Circular muscles are around each siphon and these have a few short longitudinal branches projecting back onto each side of the body. The only other body muscles detected are the short, thick, parallel, transverse muscle bands arranged in rows along each side of the mid-ventral and mid-dorsal lines. These rows begin just behind the branchial siphon on each side and extend the full length of the body on the right side of the middorsal line and the left side of the mid-ventral line. They were not detected in the posterior half of the body either on the right side of the ventral mid-line or the left side of the dorsal mid-line. The row on the anterior half of the body to the left of the mid-dorsal line is continuous with a row of longer transverse bands extending down the posterior half of the middle of the left side of the body just ventral to the gut. The ends of these short muscle bands sometimes are frayed into a short brush of separate fibres; or they come to a point or the fibres are exactly the same length and are tightly bunched together. The muscles are not symmetrical, one end often being different from the other A ring of fine, pointed branchial tentacles are at the base of the branchial siphon. The dorsal tubercle, in a roomy peritubercular area, has a reverse C-shaped opening with slightly irregular in-turned horns. A dorsal ganglion is just dorsal to the tubercle. The dorsal lamina consisting of numerous finely tapered languets extends the whole length of the branchial sac to the oesophageal opening at the postero-dorsal corner of the body. The branchial sac has many rows of short, oval and very even perforations. Fine parallel internal longitudinal vessels supported on small papillae extend longitudinally over the internal surface of the branchial wall at right angles to the rows of perforations, and create meshes containing 2 – 3 perforations occasionally crossed by parastigmatic vessels. Ciliated epithelium was not detected lining these perforations. Despite the highly contracted condition of the muscles in these specimens, these pharyngeal perforations appear not to be distorted. The short oesophagus curves anteriorly to open into the elliptical, obliquely orientated stomach. The internal lining of the stomach is raised into about thirty fine, transparent, crowded, sometimes crinkled, parallel folds. The cylindrical intestine, opening from the tapered, distal end of the stomach, extends anteriorly in a gentle arc, only slightly concave dorsally. The anal opening, about a third of the body length behind the atrial opening, has a margin broken into shallow lobes. The tubular ovary, in the body wall, outside and almost completely covered by the gut, extends from the stomach to about halfway up the intestine. A crowded network of very fine testis tubules covers the walls of the stomach and extends to about two-thirds of the distance up the intestine. The vas deferens continues along the dorsal midline opening, with the oviduct, at the base of the atrial siphon. The network of testis tubules can be seen from the inside of the stomach through the thin stomach wall. They tend to obscure the crowded fine parallel slightly crinkled folds that line the internal wall of the stomach.
Ciallusiidae (Ascidiacea, Tunicata), a monotypic family from deeper waters of the tropical Indo-West Pacific
Remarks. Millar (1963) examined the type specimens of Ciallusia longa Van Name, 1918 although he did not recognise its possible relationship with Pterygascidia Sluiter, 1904. Tokioka 1967 first noted the similarity of P. mirabilis Sluiter, 1904 and Ciallusia longa Van Name, 1918. He observed the row of pointed languets along the dorsal mid-line in both species and established that Sluiter’s report of a plain dorsal lamina in P. m i r a b i l i s was incorrect. Nevertheless, although Tokioka (1971 a) thought the genera synonymous (a view now well established) he thought their type species were distinct species of the genus Pterygascidia, separated from each other by small differences in the arrangement of muscle bundles, orientation of the stomach, the presence of stomach folds, differences in the size of the external flaps of test around the apertures and (in P. mirabilis) an oblique row of short muscles about one third of the distance down each side of the body (that appear to be the isolated terminal ends of longitudinal siphon muscles separated by sudden contraction). Tokioka (1967) counted about 60 internal longitudinal branchial vessels on each side in C. longa but does not record the number of rows of perforations, which invariably are numerous and usually are not precisely recorded. Tokioka (1971 a) also thought the pharyngeal wall of C. longa to be perforated by ciliated stigmata (although these have not been demonstrated in any of the material). A digestive gland observed only by Millar (1963) may be obscured by the sheath of testis follicles around the wall of the intestine (see Monniot F and C. 2003). In his account of P. mirabilis, Tokioka’s (1971 b) reports that in one of the specimens the distal end of the vas deferens at the base of the atrial siphon is divided into separate short branches. This has not been observed in other specimens and it may be an abnormality. Most of these differences between specimens appear to be variations associated with the size, state of contraction of the body wall and / or the condition of the specimens. A few (such as the absence of stomach folds and a smooth-edged dorsal lamina) result from errors in interpreting the material. It appears that all recorded specimens are conspecific and that the species are synonymous.
Ciallusiidae (Ascidiacea, Tunicata), a monotypic family from deeper waters of the tropical Indo-West Pacific
Distribution. Previously recorded: Philippines (Van Name 1918, Tokioka 1971 a, Monniot F. and C. 2003); Timor (Sluiter 1904); Indonesia (Millar 1988). New record: CSIRO SS 05 / 07 (Stn 129 - 034, 121.0584 E 15.7928 S, 119 m, 1 July 2007, Beam Trawl QM G 328489 — 12 specimens). The species is known from waters 12 m to 216 m deep.
Ciallusiidae (Ascidiacea, Tunicata), a monotypic family from deeper waters of the tropical Indo-West Pacific

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Geographic Distribution(3)

Central Indo-Pacific
Central Indo-Pacific
Central Indo-Pacific

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CITATIONS

References(3)

  • 1

    Kott, P. (2009). Taxonomic revision of Ascidiacea (Tunicata) from the upper continental slope off north-western Australia. <em>Journal of Natural History.</em> 43: 1947-1986.

    additional sourceWorld Register of Marine Species
  • 2

    Sluiter, C. P. (1904). Die Tunicaten der Siboga-Expedition. Part 1. Die socialen und holosomen Ascidien. <em>Siboga-Exped.</em> 56a: 1-126.

    original descriptionWorld Register of Marine Species
  • 3

    van der Land, J. (ed). (2008). UNESCO-IOC Register of Marine Organisms (URMO).

    additional sourceWorld Register of Marine Species
  • Source Information

    GBIF Backbone Taxonomy

    GBIF Backbone Taxonomy

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    The GBIF Backbone Taxonomy is a single, synthetic management classification with the goal of covering all names GBIF is dealing with. It's the taxonomic backbone that allows GBIF to integrate name based information from different resources, no matter if these are occurrence datasets, species pages, names from nomenclators or external sources like EOL, Genbank or IUCN. This backbone allows taxonomic search, browse and reporting operations across all those resources in a consistent way and to provide means to crosswalk names from one source to another.

    It is updated regulary through an automated process in which the Catalogue of Life acts as a starting point also providing the complete higher classification above families. Additional scientific names only found in other authoritative nomenclatural and taxonomic datasets are then merged into the tree, thus extending the original catalogue and broadening the backbones name coverage. The GBIF Backbone taxonomy also includes identifiers for Operational Taxonomic Units (OTUs) drawn from the barcoding resources iBOL and UNITE.

    International Barcode of Life project (iBOL), Barcode Index Numbers (BINs). BINs are connected to a taxon name and its classification by taking into account all names applied to the BIN and picking names with at least 80% consensus. If there is no consensus of name at the species level, the selection process is repeated moving up the major Linnaean ranks until consensus is achieved.

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    The GBIF Backbone Taxonomy is available for download at https://hosted-datasets.gbif.org/datasets/backbone/ in different formats together with an archive of all previous versions.

    The following 105 sources have been used to assemble the GBIF backbone with number of names given in brackets:

    • Catalogue of Life Checklist - 4766428 names
    • International Barcode of Life project (iBOL) Barcode Index Numbers (BINs) - 635951 names
    • UNITE - Unified system for the DNA based fungal species linked to the classification - 611208 names
    • The Paleobiology Database - 212054 names
    • World Register of Marine Species - 188857 names
    • The Interim Register of Marine and Nonmarine Genera - 183894 names
    • The World Checklist of Vascular Plants (WCVP) - 131891 names
    • GBIF Backbone Taxonomy - 114350 names
    • TAXREF - 109374 names
    • The Leipzig catalogue of vascular plants - 75380 names
    • ZooBank - 73549 names
    • Integrated Taxonomic Information System (ITIS) - 68377 names
    • Plazi.org taxonomic treatments database - 61346 names
    • Genome Taxonomy Database r207 - 60545 names
    • International Plant Names Index - 52329 names
    • Fauna Europaea - 45077 names
    • The National Checklist of Taiwan (Catalogue of Life in Taiwan, TaiCoL) - 36193 names
    • Dyntaxa. Svensk taxonomisk databas - 35892 names
    • The Plant List with literature - 32692 names
    • United Kingdom Species Inventory (UKSI) - 29643 names
    • Artsnavnebasen - 29208 names
    • The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species - 21221 names
    • Afromoths, online database of Afrotropical moth species (Lepidoptera) - 13961 names
    • Brazilian Flora 2020 project - Projeto Flora do Brasil 2020 - 13829 names
    • Prokaryotic Nomenclature Up-to-Date (PNU) - 10079 names
    • Checklist Dutch Species Register - Nederlands Soortenregister - 8814 names
    • ICTV Master Species List (MSL) - 7852 names
    • Cockroach Species File - 6020 names
    • GRIN Taxonomy - 5882 names
    • Taxon list of fungi and fungal-like organisms from Germany compiled by the DGfM - 4570 names
    • Catalogue of Afrotropical Bees - 3623 names
    • Catalogue of Tenebrionidae (Coleoptera) of North America - 3327 names
    • Checklist of Beetles (Coleoptera) of Canada and Alaska. Second Edition. - 3312 names
    • Systema Dipterorum - 2850 names
    • Catalogue of the Pterophoroidea of the World - 2807 names
    • The Clements Checklist - 2675 names
    • Taxon list of Hymenoptera from Germany compiled in the context of the GBOL project - 2496 names
    • IOC World Bird List, v13.2 - 2366 names
    • Official Lists and Indexes of Names in Zoology - 2310 names
    • National checklist of all species occurring in Denmark - 1922 names
    • Myriatrix - 1876 names
    • Database of Vascular Plants of Canada (VASCAN) - 1822 names
    • Taxon list of vascular plants from Bavaria, Germany compiled in the context of the BFL project - 1771 names
    • Orthoptera Species File - 1742 names
    • A list of the terrestrial fungi, flora and fauna of Madeira and Selvagens archipelagos - 1602 names
    • Aphid Species File - 1565 names
    • World Spider Catalog - 1561 names
    • Taxon list of Jurassic Pisces of the Tethys Palaeo-Environment compiled at the SNSB-JME - 1270 names
    • Backbone Family Classification Patch - 1143 names
    • GBIF Algae Classification - 1100 names
    • International Cichorieae Network (ICN): Cichorieae Portal - 975 names
    • Psocodea Species File - 803 names
    • New Zealand Marine Macroalgae Species Checklist - 787 names
    • Annotated checklist of endemic species from the Western Balkans - 754 names
    • Taxon list of animals with German names (worldwide) compiled at the SMNS - 503 names
    • Catalogue of the Alucitoidea of the World - 472 names
    • Lygaeoidea Species File - 462 names
    • Catálogo de Plantas y Líquenes de Colombia - 422 names
    • GBIF Backbone Patch - 317 names
    • Phasmida Species File - 259 names
    • Cortinariaceae fetched from the Index Fungorum API - 234 names
    • Coreoidea Species File - 233 names
    • GTDB supplement - 139 names
    • Mantodea Species File - 119 names
    • Endemic species in Taiwan - 93 names
    • Taxon list of Araneae from Germany compiled in the context of the GBOL project - 88 names
    • Species of Hominidae - 78 names
    • Taxon list of Sternorrhyncha from Germany compiled in the context of the GBOL project - 77 names
    • Taxon list of mosses from Germany compiled in the context of the GBOL project - 75 names
    • Mammal Species of the World - 73 names
    • Plecoptera Species File - 71 names
    • Species Fungorum Plus - 64 names
    • Catalogue of the type specimens of Cosmopterigidae (Lepidoptera: Gelechioidea) from research collections of the Zoological Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences - 47 names
    • Species named after famous people - 41 names
    • Dermaptera Species File - 36 names
    • Taxon list of Trichoptera from Germany compiled in the context of the GBOL project - 34 names
    • True Fruit Flies (Diptera, Tephritidae) of the Afrotropical Region - 33 names
    • Range and Regularities in the Distribution of Earthworms of the Earthworms of the USSR Fauna. Perel, 1979 - 32 names
    • Taxon list of Diplura from Germany compiled in the context of the GBOL project - 30 names
    • Lista de referencia de especies de aves de Colombia - 2022 - 24 names
    • Taxon list of Auchenorrhyncha from Germany compiled in the context of the GBOL project - 20 names
    • Catalogue of the type specimens of Polycestinae (Coleoptera: Buprestidae) from research collections of the Zoological Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences - 19 names
    • Taxon list of Thysanoptera from Germany compiled in the context of the GBOL project - 19 names
    • Lista de especies de vertebrados registrados en jurisdicción del Departamento del Huila - 18 names
    • Taxon list of Microcoryphia (Archaeognatha) from Germany compiled in the context of the GBOL project - 15 names
    • Catalogue of the type specimens of Bufonidae and Megophryidae (Amphibia: Anura) from research collections of the Zoological Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences - 12 names
    • Grylloblattodea Species File - 11 names
    • Coleorrhyncha Species File - 9 names
    • Taxon list of liverworts from Germany compiled in the context of the GBOL project - 9 names
    • Embioptera Species File - 7 names
    • Taxon list of Pisces and Cyclostoma from Germany compiled in the context of the GBOL project - 6 names
    • Taxon list of Pteridophyta from Germany compiled in the context of the GBOL project - 6 names
    • Taxon list of Siphonaptera from Germany compiled in the context of the GBOL project - 5 names
    • The Earthworms of the Fauna of Russia. Perel, 1997 - 5 names
    • Taxon list of Zygentoma from Germany compiled in the context of the GBOL project - 4 names
    • Asiloid Flies: new taxa of Diptera: Apioceridae, Asilidae, and Mydidae - 3 names
    • Taxon list of Protura from Germany compiled in the context of the GBOL project - 3 names
    • Taxon list of hornworts from Germany compiled in the context of the GBOL project - 2 names
    • Chrysididae Species File - 1 names
    • Taxon list of Dermaptera from Germany compiled in the context of the GBOL project - 1 names
    • Taxon list of Diplopoda from Germany in the context of the GBOL project - 1 names
    • Taxon list of Orthoptera (Grashoppers) from Germany compiled at the SNSB - 1 names
    • Taxon list of Pscoptera from Germany compiled in the context of the GBOL project - 1 names
    • Taxon list of Pseudoscorpiones from Germany compiled in the context of the GBOL project - 1 names
    • Taxon list of Raphidioptera from Germany compiled in the context of the GBOL project - 1 names

    GBIF Secretariat (2023). GBIF Backbone Taxonomy. Checklist dataset https://doi.org/10.15468/39omei accessed via GBIF.org on 2026-06-14.

    CC BYPublished 8/28/2023View dataset
    GBIF Usage Key
    2331217
    Dataset Key
    d7dddbf4-2cf0-4f39-9b2a-bb099caae36c
    Origin
    source
    Backbone Key
    2331217
    Taxon ID
    gbif:2331217
    Last Crawled
    8/22/2023
    Last Interpreted
    8/22/2023