Published December 31, 2013 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Corella borealis Traustedt 1886

Description

Corella borealis Traustedt, 1886

Fig 11

Traustedt, 1886: 423, Kara sea. Hartmeyer 1903: 271, Spitzberg. Van Name 1912, Massachusetts. Arnback-Christie Linde 1934: 71, Fearoes, 1952:24. Millar 1966: 41, Greenland.

Specimens collected in Iceland during the BIOICE survey (66°1972N–19°3543E, 183m) stored in the MNHN collection were examined to complete the description of the anatomical characters of this poorly known species. The body is globular on a thick but soft peduncle anchored by rhizoids (Fig. 11 A). The largest specimen was 2cm long. The tunic is naked, vitreous and thin. Both siphons are sessile and with an undulated rim. The body wall is thin. The siphon muscles are weak and do not extend upon the body wall. About 10 muscular ribbons cross transversally the left body side and dichotomise only at their ventral and dorsal extremities (Fig. 11 B). The oral tentacles, about 60, are long and thin, planted on a thick rod. The dorsal tubercle is U-shaped placed in a flat V of the pre-pharyngeal groove. The dorsal languets are pointed, followed by a retro-pharyngeal band as long as the dorsal lamina. The branchial sac (Fig. 11 E) extends posteriorly to the oesophagus and has 25 rows of 25 spiral stigmata per half row, and 35 longitudinal vessels on each side. The stimata are flat in 4 turns and not interrupted. The gut forms an open loop (Fig. 11 B,D). The oesophagus is narrow, the stomach globular with a wall showing ampullae rather than true folds. The rectum is dorsal, it ends in a wide anus with 5 petal-like lobes (Fig. 11 C). The gonad is entirely included inside the wide open gut loop (Fig. 11 D). The testis is made of small densely packed vesicles and lies close to the stomach and above the ovary (Fig. 11 D). Few sperm ducts arise from the testis mass, joining in a single duct on the internal side of the ovary. The sperm duct turns around the ovary and follows the intestine and rectum before opening against the anus. The ovary is massive; the oviduct is linked to the rectum. Corella borealis is recorded only from the northern part of the Atlantic Ocean. It differs from the other European species by the design of the left side musculature and the gonad shape.

Notes

Published as part of Monniot, Françoise, 2013, The genus Corella (Ascidiacea, Phlebobranchia, Corellidae) in the Southern Hemisphere with description of a new species, pp. 135-149 in Zootaxa 3702 (2) on pages 145-146, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3702.2.3, http://zenodo.org/record/247031

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Linked records

Additional details

Biodiversity

Family
Corellidae
Genus
Corella
Kingdom
Animalia
Order
Enterogona
Phylum
Chordata
Scientific name authorship
Traustedt
Species
borealis
Taxon rank
species
Taxonomic concept label
Corella borealis Traustedt, 1886 sec. Monniot, 2013