Molgula occulta
{{Short description|Species of sea squirt}}
{{Distinguish|Molgula oculata}}
{{Speciesbox
| image =
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| taxon = Molgula occulta
| authority = Kupffer, 1875{{cite WoRMS |author=Sanamyan, Karen |year=2013 |title=Molgula occulta Kupffer, 1875 |id=103791 |accessdate=2013-06-05 }}
| synonyms =
- Anurella roscovita Lacaze-Duthiers, 1877
- Caesira occulta (Kupffer, 1875)
- Molgula africana Sluiter, 1915
- Molgula coreni Traustedt, 1880
- Molgula hannensis Peres, 1949
- Molgula psammodes Traustedt, 1880
}}
Molgula occulta is a species of solitary tunicate in the family Molgulidae. It is native to the north eastern Atlantic Ocean, the North Sea and the Mediterranean Sea. The specific name occulta means "tailless" and refers to the tunicate's larva, which lacks the tail found in some other species in the genus Molgula.{{cite web | url=http://nyanglish.com/tunicate-in-the | title=tunicate in the | accessdate=18 April 2016}}
Description
Molgula occulta is a solitary, oval-globular tunicate with a broad, shallow six-lobed oral siphon and a similar-sized four-lobed atrial siphon, both near the apex. It is {{convert|1.5|to|3|cm|1|abbr=on}} tall, light brown in colour and resembles a kiwifruit in size and appearance. The rather stiff tunic wall is completely coated with shell fragments, mud particles and grains of sand. This distinguishes it from the otherwise very similar species Molgula oculata which has a bare patch around and between its siphons to which sediment does not adhere.{{cite book |title=Collins Pocket Guide to the Sea Shore |last=Barrett |first=John |last2=Yonge |first2=Charles Maurice |year=1958 |publisher=Collins & Co. |isbn=0002193213 |pages=188 }}
Distribution and habitat
Molgula occulta is found in the north eastern Atlantic and its range extends from Norway and Sweden to the Iberian Peninsula and the Mediterranean Sea. In the British Isles, it is fairly common on west, south and east facing coasts, on the lower shore or in the shallow subtidal zone where it buries itself in sand or mud with just its siphons protruding.Picton, B.E. & Morrow, C.C. (2015). [http://www.habitas.org.uk/marinelife/species.asp?item=ZD2570 Molgula occulta Kupffer, 1875.]
Biology
Molgula occulta is a filter feeder. It draws in water through its oral siphon, passes it through its gut, removing the edible bacteria and other planktonic particles on the way, and expelling it through the atrial siphon.{{cite book |title=Invertebrate Zoology, 7th edition |last1=Ruppert |first1=Edward E. |last2=Fox |first2=Richard, S. |last3=Barnes |first3=Robert D. |year=2004 |publisher=Cengage Learning |isbn=81-315-0104-3 |pages=940–956 }}
The larvae of tunicates are known as tadpole larvae because of their resemblance to amphibian tadpoles. The larva of the closely related species Molgula oculata has a tail (oculata means "tailed") but that of Molgula occulta does not. Nor does it have an otolith, a sensory organ connected with balance, which the former possesses.{{cite web |url=http://ivory.idyll.org/blog/about-those-molgula.html |title=Evolution of chordate features: looking at the Molgula |author=Brown, C. Titus |date=2010-08-30 |accessdate=2013-06-04}} Molgula occulta hatches into a tailless larva from the chorion in twelve hours and develops four ampullae or dilatations immediately before metamorphosing into a juvenile. It appears that the tailed larva is the ancestral state in the Molgulidae and that loss of the tail has occurred on at least four separate occasions independently. Without tail or otolith, the larva is unable to swim or orient itself and so is unable to disperse to new locations. It is hypothesized that living as it does on sand flats, the larva is passively dispersed by waves and currents.{{cite journal |author1=Maliska, Max E. |author2=Swalla, Billie J. |year=2010 |title=Molgula pugetiensis is a Pacific tailless ascidian within the Roscovita clade of Molgulids |journal=The Biological Bulletin |volume=219 |issue=3 |pages=277–282 |issn= 1939-8697 |doi=10.1086/bblv219n3p277 |url=http://www.biolbull.org/content/219/3/277.full }}