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Cyclosalpa bakeri Ritter 1905

Cyclosalpa bakeri

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Cyclosalpa bakeri is a salp most commonly found in tropical Indo-Pacific waters, but can range as far north as Alaska in low numbers during spring and high numbers during summer (Doubleday et al. 2016). They are found in either a barrel-shaped solitary form or a circular colonial form. These sequential hermaphrodites have a body size that ranges from 23-55mm as an aggregate zooid and up to 27-82mm as a solitary zooid (Sunwoo et al. 2012). When in a solitary form, the salp will reproduce through asexual reproduction. In a colonial form, the females of one aggregate produce eggs that are fertilized by the sperm of a different aggregate. In this way, C. bakeri exhibits alternation of generations. This organism experiences direct development and there is no larval stage.Like other salps, C. bakeri, is a filter feeder and eats plankton in the water column as it moves forward by jet propulsion.

Local ecology: Using CalCOFI data from 1951-2002, it was determined that when C. bakeri was found in the California Current system, it would appear most abundantly during cool phases. These cool-phase salps included other species such as Salpa maxima, Pegea socia and Cyclosalpa affinis. During warm phases they were almost completely absent from waters in Southern California (Lavaniegos & Ohman 2003).

References

  • Lavaniegos, B.E., & Ohman, M. D. (2003). Long-term changes in pelagic tunicates of the California Current. Deep-Sea Research Part II, Topical Studies in Oceanography, 50(14-16), 2473. doi:10.1016/S0967-0645(03)00132-2
  • Li, K., Doubleday, A. J., Galbraith, M. D., & Hopcroft, R. R. (2016). High abundance of salps in the coastal Gulf of Alaska during 2011: A first record of bloom occurrence for the northern Gulf. Deep-Sea Research Part II, Topical Studies in Oceanography 132(136-145). doi:10.1016/j.dsr2.2016.04.009
  • Sunwoo, K., Jung-Hye, W., & Chang-Bae, K. (2012). Taxonomic Study of Genus Cyclosalpa (Thaliacea: Salpida: Salpidae) from Korea. Animal Systematics, Evolution & Diversity, 28(4), 261-268.

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Cyclosalpa bakeri

provided by wikipedia EN

Cyclosalpa bakeri is a salp, a marine tunicate in the class Thaliacea. It is found floating in the open sea in the Indo-Pacific region.

Description

Like other salps, Cyclosalpa bakeri has two different phases. In one of these forms, individuals live a solitary life. They are cylindrical, transparent, gelatinous animals with a rather flabby test, growing to about 15 cm (6ins) long. There are openings at the anterior and posterior ends of the cylinder which can be opened or closed as needed. The bodies have seven transverse bands of muscle interspersed by white, translucent patches. A stolon grows from near the endostyle (an elongated glandular structure producing mucus for trapping food particles). The stolon is a ribbon-like organ on which a batch of aggregate forms of the animal are produced by budding. The aggregate is the second, colonial form of the salp and is also gelatinous, transparent and flabby. It takes the shape of a radial whorl of individuals up to about 20 cm (4 in) in diameter. It is formed of approximately 12 zooids linked side by side in a shape that resembles a crown.[2][3]

Distribution

Cyclosalpa bakeri has an Indo-Pacific distribution. Its range includes tropical and temperate waters and extends as far north as Alaska.[1]

Biology

Cyclosalpa bakeri moves by contracting its bands of muscles rhythmically at the same time opening and closing the front and rear openings appropriately. This squeezes water out from the hollow interior and the animal moves in the opposite direction, a form of jet propulsion.[3] This water movement brings in suspended phytoplankton which are caught by a mucus net. Cyclosalpa bakeri is an extremely efficient feeder. The aggregates can grow by a quarter of their size each day and individuals can eat more than half their body mass daily.[2]

Individuals within the aggregate are sequential hermaphrodites. They usually start life as females but later develop into males.[3] Eggs are produced by the females and are fertilised by sperm from another aggregate. There is no larval form and a single embryo develops in each individual in the aggregate. This later becomes detached from the aggregate and becomes a solitary individual ready to undergo asexual reproduction by budding again. The animal's rapid growth and this alternation of generations means that the population can build up rapidly when there is a plentiful food supply such as a bloom of phytoplankton. The salps themselves are eaten by fish, turtles, birds, jellyfish, heteropods, siphonophores and ctenophores.[2]

References

  1. ^ a b Cyclosalpa bakeri - Ritter, 1905 World Register of Marine Species. Retrieved 2016-04-10.
  2. ^ a b c Cyclosalpa bakeri - Ritter, 1905 Archived 2016-03-21 at the Wayback Machine JelliesZone, by David Wrobel. Retrieved 2016-04-10.
  3. ^ a b c Pelagic Tunicates Archived 2016-06-23 at the Wayback Machine JelliesZone, by David Wrobel. Retrieved 2016-04-10.
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Cyclosalpa bakeri: Brief Summary

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Cyclosalpa bakeri is a salp, a marine tunicate in the class Thaliacea. It is found floating in the open sea in the Indo-Pacific region.

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