TUNICATE

tooˈnəkĭt, marine animal of the phylum Chordata, which also includes the vertebrates. The adult form of most tunicates (also called urochordates) shows no resemblance to vertebrate animals, but such a resemblance is evident in the larva. The most familiar tunicates are the sea squirts, or ascidians (class Ascidiacea). Adult sea squirts are sedentary, filter-feeding, cylindrical or globular animals, usually found attached to rocks, shells, pilings, or boat bottoms. The soft body is surrounded by a thick test, or tunic, often transparent or translucent and varying in consistency from gelatinous to leathery. The tunic (for which the tunicates are named) is secreted by the body wall of the adult animal. It is composed of cellulose, an almost unique occurrence of that material in the animal kingdom. Two siphons project from the animal's body; water enters the incurrent siphon at the top of the body and leaves the excurrent siphon at the side. Food particles are filtered from the water by the pharynx, which occupies most of the body, and are then passed into the digestive system. Some species reproduce by budding, resulting in the formation of colonies of sea squirts, joined at their bases by slender stalks or embedded in a slab of common tunic material. In addition, nearly all species reproduce sexually and are hermaphroditic. The free-swimming larva, called a tadpole, has a muscular tail and is similar in appearance to a frog tadpole. The larva has the characteristic chordate features also found in the embryos of vertebrates: a dorsal, hollow nerve cord; a stiffening rod, or notochord; and gill slits leading into the pharynx. The tadpole eventually settles and undergoes a drastic metamorphosis into the adult form. A common solitary sea squirt of both coasts of North America is the slender, yellow, transparent Ciona intestinalis, about 2 in. (5 cm) tall. The sea peach, Tethyum pyriforme, is a round, peach-colored sea squirt found from Maine north. Sea grapes are clusters of the greenish colonial squirt, Molgula manhattensis, common from Massachusetts south. Golden stars are colonies of various Botryllus species; the bright yellow individual animals are grouped in starlike clusters in a flat, encrusting, greenish tunic. Amaroucium species form colonies of minute animals embedded in a grayish, gristly tunic; chunks of such colonies, often washed ashore, are known as sea pork. There are two other groups of tunicates, both found in the plankton of open oceans. The salps (class Thaliacea) are barrel-shaped tunicates, open at both ends; they swim by muscular contractions that force water through the body. The larvaceans (class Larvacea) retain the larval form, with a tail and a notochord, as adults. A commonly held theory maintains that vertebrates evolved from animals like the larvaceans. Larvaceans have no tunics, but secrete gelatinous containers, called houses; these are used to filter food from the water and are continuously discarded and replaced. Tunicates are classified in the phylum Chordata, subphylum Urochordata.

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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Questia Books and Articles on: Tunicate
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books on: Tunicate  - 63 results

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...204 30. Tunicate retrogression from free-swimming larva...470 134. Tunicate, Ascidia. Diagram of longitudinal section...tail, and , cord . Tunicates or sea-squirts. Generally sedentary marine...
...1986) proposed that teosinte and half-tunicate (pod) wild corn hybridized, Eubanks...of his work, as shown in the compound tunicate gene (Mangelsdorf and Galinat, 1964...protection and soft glumes of a pod or tunicate corn. The dilemma is that only corn bridges...
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journal articles on: Tunicate  - 2 results

 
 
...of the University of the Mediterranean in Marseille discussed his work on reconstructing 3-D embryo models from 2-D data on tunicate embryos. Hamid Bolouri of the Institute for Systems Biology in Seattle also creates models of embryonic development, but they...
...sacrifices on state reliefs. In the case of a fragmentary state relief of the late Flavian period in the Vatican Museum,l26 a tunicate, girlish-looking boy wears a feminized beehive hairstyle that was modeled to some extent on that of Domitia, the wife of the...


 

magazine articles on: Tunicate  - 3 results

 
 
Tunicate Classification by Jonathan Scheff The paper: F. Delsuc et al., "Tunicates and not cephalochordates are the closest living relatives...finding: Using a data set of 146 nuclear genes, including tunicate data from the Oikopleura dioica genome project, Frederic...
...6,500-foot-deep habitat. There are no eyes at all on this predatory tunicate (above), collected in Monterey Bays two-mile- deep canyon. Like a Venuss-flytrap, the tunicate clamps its "mouth," called an oral hood, around tiny shrimp and other...
...contain a diverse assemblage of invertebrates such as corals, tunicates, molluscs, bryozoans, sponges, and echinoderms that are absent...case of an anticancer compound extracted from a sea squirt (tunicate). Mass production of a target species through captive breeding...


 

encyclopedia articles on: Tunicate  - 9 results

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TUNICATE too n kit, marine animal of the phylum Chordata , which also includes the vertebrates. The adult form of most tunicates (also called urochordates) shows no resemblance to vertebrate...resemblance is evident in the larva. The most familiar tunicates are the sea squirts, or ascidians (class Ascidiacea...
SEA PEACH see tunicate . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
SEA SQUIRT see tunicate . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
SALP see tunicate . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
ASCIDIAN see Chordata ; tunicate . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
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