Styela angularis

The angular sea squirt, Styela angularis, is a solitary, hermaphroditic ascidian tunicate that is found along the coast of Southern Africa from Lüderitz Bay in Namibia to the Eastern Cape.[2]

Styela angularis
Scientific classification
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S. angularis
Binomial name
Styela angularis
(Stimpson, 1855)[1]
Synonyms [1]
  • Cynthia angularis Stimpson, 1855
  • Tethyum costatum Hartmeyer, 1911
  • Styela costata (Hartmeyer, 1911)

Description

Order of 100 millimetres (3.9 in) tall, with a tough flexible opaque hexagonal test tapering down to a narrow base peduncle. Stands upright on the substrate. Cloacal siphon terminal, and oral siphon slightly ventral and posterior.

Behaviour

Occurs singly on rocks or other hard surfaces where water is clean and fairly fast moving. Often covered by epibionts.

gollark: I really ought to deploy that on CNLite or something and tie it to the orbital lasers.
gollark: For the original incarnation of the traffic light project.
gollark: I think what did it was me calling `pcall(somePowerUsingThing)` in a tight loop.
gollark: It used to just error if you used too much power.
gollark: Well, it doesn't work the same way, it force-stops your program for a bit.

References

  1. Rosana Moreira da Rocha & Karen Sanamyan (2013). Shenkar N, Gittenberger A, Lambert G, Rius M, Moreira Da Rocha R, Swalla BJ, Turon X (eds.). "Styela angularis (Stimpson, 1855)". Ascidiacea World Database. World Register of Marine Species. Retrieved May 17, 2013.
  2. Monniot, C; Monniot, F; Griffiths, C.L; Schleyer, M (2001). "South African ascidians". Annals of the South African Museum. 108 (1): 1–141. ISBN 0868131806.


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