sealord > Three flatworms are in this photograph of a small area of a compound ascidian (or sea squirt) Botrylloides sp..  The native species of this ascidian is Botrylloides leachi but the invasive ascidian Botrylloides violaceus is spreading in the English Channel and it is not yet known whether this ascidian colony is the invasive species or the native species.  Dr. John Bishop and Dr. Gretchen Lambert tell me that the easiest way to tell the ascidian colonies apart is by looking at the ascidian larvae, which are not visible in this colony.  World authority on ascidians, Dr. Gretchen Lambert wrote "I also wondered if the orange Botrylloides is Botrylloides violaceus. I looked very carefully at the photo but there are no visible brooded embryos, which are the best way to tell this species (apart from the native species Botrylloides leachi)."  Dr. Lambert recommends that I collect some colonies, tear them apart carefully, and look for huge brooded larvae in the tunic. "They will usually be pink, no matter what the colour of the colony is."  She writes "Botrylloides violaceus colonies are always a solid color--all orange, or all purple, etc. The larvae are more than 1 mm in diameter, spherical, and when mature have 24-32 lateral ampullae arranged in parallel around the anterior end like a little mop. In Botrylloides leachi the larvae are small, and brooded inside the zooids and not in the tunic."  

There appear to be two species of flatworm in this image of a close-up of the ascidian colony.  One of the flatworms is gliding over another and heading to the lower right of the image. This image was taken south of the Lihou Island causeway on Guernsey's west coast on the 10 May 2009.  The cryptic coloration of the flatworms makes them difficult to see.  After 14 years of rock pooling on Guernsey's coast this is the first time I have noticed these flatworms.  Their identity has not yet been determined.  But they appear to be common.  This link provides a possible identification, which remains to be verified:   http://www.rzuser.uni-heidelberg.de/~bu6/flat0482.html
File No. 100509 3973
©RLLord
fishinfo@guernsey.net
sealord > Fish Quay pontoons in St. Peter Port harbour, Guernsey >  Urticina felina Fish Quay pontoon 271207 2179 smg
sealord > This image shows a box of maboya, Halocynthia roretzi, at one of the intermediate wholesaler stands at the Tsukiji Metropolitan Fish Market in Tokyo, Japan.  These are ascidians (generic Japanese name: hoya) .  They are in the taxonomic class ascidiacea.  This name comes from the Greek 'asci' which means bag or bladder.  They are also known as tunicates because their body is encased in a tunic or a test.    As swimming larvae these animals possess a notochord but this is lost when they settle on a substrate.  These ascidians are cultivated in Korea and Japan where they are prized as food.  Another ascidian species is eaten in the South of France and I have also seen ascidians for sale in restaurants in Brussels.  Author Alan Davidson who wrote "Mediterranean Seafood" states that the Mediterranean species that he ate "tasted quite good" and looked "like scrambled eggs".   He cut open the tunic or test to eat the "yellow part" inside the animal.  I have never knowingly eaten them myself.   Photographed in December 1988.
File No. 1288 29
©RLLord
fishinfo@guernsey.net
sealord > Small clusters of zooids of the star ascidian, Botryllus schlosseri, can be seen all year long on the Guernsey seashore but the ascidian colonies don't begin to expand until the middle of the spring.  This image taken on the 18th April 2007 shows that star ascidian colonies, Botryllus schlosseri, are beginning to enlarge.  The grow rapidly on the base of boulders and cobbles and depending on the size of the stone they grow on they can exceed 20 to 30 cm across.  They reach their peak size in June and July.  I saw also Botrylloides leachi colonies on 18 April 2007.
File No. BG 180407 8016
©RLLord
fishinfo@guernsey.net
sealord > Commercial crab and lobster fisherman Clive Brown who pots off Guernsey's south coast gave me a solitary ascidian (sea squirt) which was attached to one of his pots.  Living inside this ascidian were these two amphipods.
File No. 2-601 
©RLLord
fishinfo@guernsey.net
sealord > This image shows the large ascidian Phallusia mamillata attached to a concrete pillar in the Queen Elizabeth 2 marina, St. Peter Port, Guernsey.  This image shows the oral tentacles guarding the entrance of the oral siphon.  The atrial siphon is below and to the right. Photographed on 26 September 2006
File No. 260906 3620 
©RLLord
fishinfo@guernsey.net
sealord > The large invasive ascidian Styela clava sticking out from a pontoon in the Queen Elizabeth 2 marina in St. Peter Port, Guernsey.  Also growing on the side of the pontoon are pink and green jewel anemones, Corynactis viridis.
Photographed on 26 September 2006
File No. 260906 3707 
©RLLord
fishinfo@guernsey.net
sealord > A colony of light-bulb sea squirts, Clavelina lepadiformis, growing on the corner of a pontoon in the Queen Elizabeth 2 marina, St. Peter Port, Guernsey.
Photographed on 5 June 2006
File No. 050606 853
©RLLord
fishinfo@guernsey.net
sealord > A colony of light-bulb sea squirts, Clavelina lepadiformis, on the corner of the one pontoons in the Queen Elizabeth 2 marina, St. Peter Port, Guernsey.
Photgraphed on 5 June 2006
File No. 050606 878
©RLLord
fishinfo@guernsey.net
Three flatworms are in this photograph of a small area of a compound ascidian (or sea squirt) Botrylloides sp.. The native species of this ascidian is Botrylloides leachi but the invasive ascidian Botrylloides violaceus is spreading in the English Channel and it is not yet known whether this ascidian colony is the invasive species or the native species. Dr. John Bishop and Dr. Gretchen Lambert tell me that the easiest way to tell the ascidian colonies apart is by looking at the ascidian larvae, which are not visible in this colony. World authority on ascidians, Dr. Gretchen Lambert wrote "I also wondered if the orange Botrylloides is Botrylloides violaceus. I looked very carefully at the photo but there are no visible brooded embryos, which are the best way to tell this species (apart from the native species Botrylloides leachi)." Dr. Lambert recommends that I collect some colonies, tear them apart carefully, and look for huge brooded larvae in the tunic. "They will usually be pink, no matter what the colour of the colony is." She writes "Botrylloides violaceus colonies are always a solid color--all orange, or all purple, etc. The larvae are more than 1 mm in diameter, spherical, and when mature have 24-32 lateral ampullae arranged in parallel around the anterior end like a little mop. In Botrylloides leachi the larvae are small, and brooded inside the zooids and not in the tunic."

There appear to be two species of flatworm in this image of a close-up of the ascidian colony. One of the flatworms is gliding over another and heading to the lower right of the image. This image was taken south of the Lihou Island causeway on Guernsey's west coast on the 10 May 2009. The cryptic coloration of the flatworms makes them difficult to see. After 14 years of rock pooling on Guernsey's coast this is the first time I have noticed these flatworms. Their identity has not yet been determined. But they appear to be common. This link provides a possible identification, which remains to be verified: http://www.rzuser.uni-heidelberg.de/~bu6/flat0482.html
File No. 100509 3973
©RLLord
fishinfo@guernsey.net
sealord > Three flatworms are in this photograph of a small area of a compound ascidian (or sea squirt) Botrylloides sp..  The native species of this ascidian is Botrylloides leachi but the invasive ascidian Botrylloides violaceus is spreading in the English Channel and it is not yet known whether this ascidian colony is the invasive species or the native species.  Dr. John Bishop and Dr. Gretchen Lambert tell me that the easiest way to tell the ascidian colonies apart is by looking at the ascidian larvae, which are not visible in this colony.  World authority on ascidians, Dr. Gretchen Lambert wrote "I also wondered if the orange Botrylloides is Botrylloides violaceus. I looked very carefully at the photo but there are no visible brooded embryos, which are the best way to tell this species (apart from the native species Botrylloides leachi)."  Dr. Lambert recommends that I collect some colonies, tear them apart carefully, and look for huge brooded larvae in the tunic. "They will usually be pink, no matter what the colour of the colony is."  She writes "Botrylloides violaceus colonies are always a solid color--all orange, or all purple, etc. The larvae are more than 1 mm in diameter, spherical, and when mature have 24-32 lateral ampullae arranged in parallel around the anterior end like a little mop. In Botrylloides leachi the larvae are small, and brooded inside the zooids and not in the tunic."  

There appear to be two species of flatworm in this image of a close-up of the ascidian colony.  One of the flatworms is gliding over another and heading to the lower right of the image. This image was taken south of the Lihou Island causeway on Guernsey's west coast on the 10 May 2009.  The cryptic coloration of the flatworms makes them difficult to see.  After 14 years of rock pooling on Guernsey's coast this is the first time I have noticed these flatworms.  Their identity has not yet been determined.  But they appear to be common.  This link provides a possible identification, which remains to be verified:   http://www.rzuser.uni-heidelberg.de/~bu6/flat0482.html
File No. 100509 3973
©RLLord
fishinfo@guernsey.net
Three flatworms are in this photograph of a small area of a compound ascidian (or sea squirt) Botrylloides sp.. The native species of this ascidian is Botrylloides leachi but the invasive ascidian Botrylloides violaceus is spreading in the English Channel and it is not yet known whether this ascidian colony is the invasive species or the native species. Dr. John Bishop and Dr. Gretchen Lambert tell me that the easiest way to tell the ascidian colonies apart is by looking at the ascidian larvae, which are not visible in this colony. World authority on ascidians, Dr. Gretchen Lambert wrote "I also wondered if the orange Botrylloides is Botrylloides violaceus. I looked very carefully at the photo but there are no visible brooded embryos, which are the best way to tell this species (apart from the native species Botrylloides leachi)." Dr. Lambert recommends that I collect some colonies, tear them apart carefully, and look for huge brooded larvae in the tunic. "They will usually be pink, no matter what the colour of the colony is." She writes "Botrylloides violaceus colonies are always a solid color--all orange, or all purple, etc. The larvae are more than 1 mm in diameter, spherical, and when mature have 24-32 lateral ampullae arranged in parallel around the anterior end like a little mop. In Botrylloides leachi the larvae are small, and brooded inside the zooids and not in the tunic."

There appear to be two species of flatworm in this image of a close-up of the ascidian colony. One of the flatworms is gliding over another and heading to the lower right of the image. This image was taken south of the Lihou Island causeway on Guernsey's west coast on the 10 May 2009. The cryptic coloration of the flatworms makes them difficult to see. After 14 years of rock pooling on Guernsey's coast this is the first time I have noticed these flatworms. Their identity has not yet been determined. But they appear to be common. This link provides a possible identification, which remains to be verified: http://www.rzuser.uni-heidelberg.de/~bu6/flat0482.html
File No. 100509 3973
©RLLord
fishinfo@guernsey.net
See photo in original gallery.

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