Ascidiacea

Ascidiacea, commonly known as the ascidians or sea squirts, is a paraphyletic class in the subphylum Tunicata of sac-like marine invertebrate filter feeders. Ascidians are characterized by a tough outer "tunic" made of a polysaccharide.

Ascidiacea
Temporal range:
Ciona intestinalis, commonly known as the vase tunicate or as a sea squirt
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Subphylum: Tunicata
Class: Ascidiacea
Blainville, 1824
Groups included
  • Aplousobranchia Lahille, 1887
  • Phlebobranchia Lahille, 1887
  • Stolidobranchia Lahille, 1886
  • Cheungkongella? Shu et al., 2001
  • Ausiidae?
Cladistically included but traditionally excluded taxa

Ascidians are found all over the world, usually in shallow water with salinities over 2.5%. While members of the Thaliacea (salps, doliolids and pyrosomes) and Appendicularia (larvaceans) swim freely like plankton, sea squirts are sessile animals after their larval phase: they then remain firmly attached to their substratum, such as rocks and shells.

There are 2,300 species of ascidians and three main types: solitary ascidians, social ascidians that form clumped communities by attaching at their bases, and compound ascidians that consist of many small individuals (each individual is called a zooid) forming large colonies.

Sea squirts feed by taking in water through a tube, the oral siphon. The water enters the mouth and pharynx, flows through mucus-covered gill slits (also called pharyngeal stigmata) into a water chamber called the atrium, then exits through the atrial siphon.

Some authors now include the thaliaceans in Ascidiacea, making it monophyletic.

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