Molgula citrina | |
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Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Subphylum: | Tunicata |
Class: | Ascidiacea |
Order: | Pleurogona |
Family: | Molgulidae |
Genus: | Molgula |
Species: | M. citrina |
Binomial name | |
Molgula citrina Alder & Hancock, 1848 |
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Synonyms | |
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Molgula citrina is a species of solitary tunicate in the family Molgulidae. It is found on both sides of the northern Atlantic Ocean and in the Arctic Ocean. In 2008 it was found in Kachemak Bay in Alaska, the first time it had been detected in the Pacific Ocean.
Molgula citrina takes the form of a globular or ovoid sac and can grow to a diameter of 18 mm (0.7 in). The tunic (outer surface of the sac) is greyish-green and firm, with few particles of sediment adhering to it, and this distinguishes it from many species in this genus. The siphons are widely separated. The buccal siphon, through which water is drawn into the body cavity, has six lobes while the atrial siphon, through which water leaves, is short and has four lobes. About fourteen branched tentacles surround the base of the buccal siphon, and prevent particles that are too large from entering the body cavity.
Molgula citrina is found in the Arctic Ocean and the northeastern Atlantic Ocean as far south as the British Isles and the northern coast of France. In the northwestern Atlantic it occurs as far south as the Gulf of Saint Lawrence and the Bay of Fundy. It is usually found in shallow water but its maximum depth range is about 200 m (656 ft). It is also a fouling organism, adhering to floating docks and associated structures.
The appearance of M. citrina in Alaska in 2008 raised the question of whether this species is a naturally occurring, circumpolar species previously undetected in the northern Pacific Ocean, or whether it had arrived anthropogenically. The former is possible because the Pacific Northwest and Alaskan waters are not well surveyed. Alternatively, it could have colonised the Pacific naturally via the Northwest Passage which is becoming more accessible because of the decrease in sea ice caused by global warming. However this would be against the trend, as some species have spread from the Pacific to the Atlantic by this route but seldom vice versa.
If M. citrina arrived in the Pacific with the help of man there are several possibilities. It is unlikely to survive in ballast water but may have been transported in the sea chest of a vessel, a recess on the hull covered with a grill and used for the intake of sea water for ballast, firefighting, engine cooling and other purposes. Sea chests house a community of organisms that would be unlikely to survive as fouling animals on the vessel's hull. M. citrina may have arrived in the Pacific in one of these, perhaps via the Northwest Passage. Being a cold water species, it is unlikely this species would have arrived via the Caribbean Sea and Panama Canal where the water temperature would be outside the tunicate's survival range.