Skeleton Panda Sea Squirt

Clavelina ossipandae, the skeleton panda sea squirt or skeleton panda ascidian (Japanese: ガイコツパンダホヤ, romanizedgaikotsu-panda-hoya), is a species of colonial ascidian (sea squirt), a group of sessile, marine filter-feeding invertebrates. Originally discovered near Kume Island in Japan by local divers, pictures of the animal attracted attention in the media for its appearance prior to its formal taxonomic description in 2024.

Skeleton panda sea squirt
Skeleton Panda Sea Squirt
Colony of C. ossipandae near Kume Island
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Subphylum: Tunicata
Class: Ascidiacea
Order: Aplousobranchia
Family: Clavelinidae
Genus: Clavelina
Species:
C. ossipandae
Binomial name
Clavelina ossipandae
Hasegawa & Kajihara, 2024

C. ossipandae lives at around 20 metres (66 ft) of depth, anchored to the surface of coral reefs with strong currents. It lives in colonies of one to four transparent individuals or zooids measuring up to 2 centimetres (0.79 in) each. Individuals in a colony are linked through connections called stolons, and originate from a single organism reproducing asexually, although they are also capable of sexual reproduction.

Among sea squirts, C. ossipandae is most recognizable for its white horizontal blood vessels, giving it a skeleton-like appearance, and black frontal dots of unknown function, that have been compared to a panda's eyes and nose. After it was featured on television programs and social media, a crowdfunded expedition sampled specimens of the animal in 2021. The researchers formally described it three years later.

History

Although the skeleton panda sea squirt was not formally described at the time, pictures of it were shared by local divers from Kume Island in Japan's Ryukyu Archipelago around 2017, notably Shunji Terai, whose diving shop drew in tourists interested in seeing the creatures. Popular on social media such as Twitter, the animal was also featured in television programs, by NHK as well as commercial broadcasters.

The images attracted the attention of Hokkaido University tunicate expert Naohiro Hasegawa, who encountered them on Twitter in 2018 and recognized the animal as distinct from other ascidian species. Supported through crowdfunding, a team of Japanese researchers led by Hasegawa sampled it in 2021 from the rocky outcrop of Tonbara, off Kume Island, which is only accessible in winter because of tidal currents and wind. In a 2024 paper announcing the discovery, the team formally described it as the new species Clavelina ossipandae. Four specimens, colonies of one to four individuals each, were collected. They were later deposited in the Invertebrate Collection of the Hokkaido University Museum in Sapporo.

Etymology

The generic name Clavelina, Latin for "little bottle", refers to the shape of zooids (individual members of the colony) in the genus. The specific epithet ossipandae is derived from Latin os (bone) and panda. Like the common name, it refers to the white rib-like markings on the sides of the zooid, as well as to the black and white patterns on its front part, resembling the face of the giant panda.

Description

Skeleton Panda Sea Squirt 
Clavelina ossipandae zooid (C: right side, D: left side)

Clavelina ossipandae is a small colonial tunicate, found in colonies of one to four zooids. Unlike in the related genera Euclavella and Nephtheis, zooids are free, although they extend from a basal mass and are connected to each other through vascular stolons. Individual zooids have been reported to be up to 2 centimetres (0.79 in) long, with sampled specimens ranging from 7 to 14 millimetres (0.28 to 0.55 in) long.

Anatomy

Each zooid is covered in its own transparent tunic, which like in most sea squirts possesses two visible openings, the oral and atrial siphons. The oral siphon, through which food particles are drawn into the pharynx, is surrounded by 10 oral tentacles. The pharynx is the main cavity in which food is filtered, funneled through a dorsal tubercle with a ciliated slit-like opening. The back side of the pharynx is lined with a series of tongue-shaped dorsal languets that help transport food, while an endostyle, another organ assisting in filter-feeding, is present on the front side below the oral siphon. The esophagus connects the pharynx to the stomach in the middle of the abdomen, followed by a tube-like intestinal loop. The latter leads to the anus, where waste is expelled through the atrial siphon.

The tunic is divided into thoracic and abdominal segments, almost equal in length, although the thoracic tunic is thinner and softer than its abdominal counterpart. The thorax bears 10–11 pairs of longitudinal muscle bands, with 2 running from the abdomen to the endostyle, 5–6 to the oral siphon and 2–4 to the dorsal side.

Patterns

Specimens bear several white transverse blood vessels along their length, running through their gills, giving the appearance of a series of ribs. The black endostyle is visible below the oral siphon, as well as a mid-dorsal black line below the atrial siphon.

C. ossipandae is also recognizable by the black markings on its white anterior portion (a central dot between the oral and atrial siphons, surrounded by two lateral bands), uniquely distinctive in the genus Clavelina. Two other species in the genus are known to bear similar patterns, although they differ in color, being dark blue on light blue in C. moluccensis and blue on yellow in C. viola. The role of these markings remains unknown.

Life cycle

C. ossipandae specimens are hermaphroditic: they possess both ovaries and testicular follicles, attached to the left side of the intestine beyond the stomach. A brood pouch is present on the back of the thorax, where eggs and larvae develop. Like in all tunicates, larvae are motile and tadpole-shaped. They measure around 1.25 millimetres (0.049 in) in length, of which the tail comprises 0.75 millimetres (0.030 in). The larval body is divided into a frontal plate, with three adhesive papillae, and a trunk bearing an ocellus and an otolith. The adhesive papillae help the larva anchor on a solid substrate, metamorphosing into a sessile adult. Like other colonial sea squirts, C. ossipandae can also reproduce asexually through budding, forming colonies of genetically identical, connected zooids.

Taxonomy

Skeleton Panda Sea Squirt 
Cladogram showing the recovered position of C. ossipandae among related species.

Several morphological traits were used to identify the skeleton panda sea squirt as a member of genus Clavelina. Namely, the zooids are free rather than fully embedded, the larvae lack the tubular structures in their adhesive organs characteristic of the related genus Pycnoclavella, and the number of spiracles (10–14) is consistent with the range seen in Clavelina species (8–20).

Through sequencing of the cytochrome c oxidase subunit I gene from the holotype and a paratype, Clavelina ossipandae was identified as the sister species of C. australis inside the genus Clavelina.

Distribution and ecology

The species is known to live in waters off the coast of Kume Island, Japan, where both the original reports and the later samples were obtained. Colonies were observed at depths of 10–20 metres (33–66 ft), anchored to coral reefs, and are believed to live specifically in areas with fast currents. It is the first species of ascidian known from Kume Island, although other specimens have been collected from the locality and are awaiting description as of 2024.

While its feeding habits are not known with certainty, C. ossipandae has been assumed to consume phytoplankton like related filter-feeding ascidians.

References

Citations

Bibliography

Tags:

Skeleton Panda Sea Squirt HistorySkeleton Panda Sea Squirt DescriptionSkeleton Panda Sea Squirt TaxonomySkeleton Panda Sea Squirt Distribution and ecologySkeleton Panda Sea Squirt

🔥 Trending searches on Wiki English:

1Lisa Marie PresleyAbdul FatawuNATOKaty PerryGary GlitterLarry NassarVietnamYandex.ZenRed Eye (British TV series)Arne SlotKobe BryantBlack Sails (TV series)Teri Baaton Mein Aisa Uljha JiyaSonic the Hedgehog 3 (film)The Jinx (miniseries)Lina Khan2024 Indian general election in MaharashtraBullet Train (film)NapoleonPrince (musician)Shaquille O'NealRestrictions on TikTok in the United StatesMadame Web (film)Indira GandhiDevin BookerValerie BertinelliManchester City F.C.Orpheus PledgerSouth AfricaBharatiya Janata PartyLimoneneIshida MitsunariSeppukuPoodle skirtNelson MandelaUnited KingdomChelsea F.C.Donte DiVincenzoLockheed Martin F-35 Lightning IIRedditStellar BladeInna Lillahi wa inna ilayhi raji'unThe GodfatherTyrese MaxeyMichael JordanVarshangalkku Shesham1993 Bishopsgate bombingSachin TendulkarList of United States cities by populationThe Watchers (film)Jeffrey EpsteinAdministrative Professionals DayJohn F. KennedyThe BeatlesFreddie MercurySouth KoreaThe World's BillionairesTottenham Hotspur F.C.The Gentlemen (2019 film)Adolf HitlerGukesh DAmar Singh ChamkilaHiroyuki SanadaWhatsAppWar for the Planet of the ApesAndrew Scott (actor)Byeon Woo-seokZendayaThe Rookie (TV series)Ivy LeagueJonathan NolanTitanicPep GuardiolaEdo periodDouglas C-54 Skymaster🡆 More