TL;DR: This study represents the most comprehensive phylogenomic dataset for the main tunicate lineages, offering a reference phylogenetic framework and first tentative timescale for tunicates, allowing a direct comparison with vertebrate model species in comparative genomics and evolutionary developmental biology studies.
Abstract: Tunicates are the closest relatives of vertebrates and are widely used as models to study the evolutionary developmental biology of chordates. Their phylogeny, however, remains poorly understood, and to date, only the 18S rRNA nuclear gene and mitogenomes have been used to delineate the major groups of tunicates. To resolve their evolutionary relationships and provide a first estimate of their divergence times, we used a transcriptomic approach to build a phylogenomic dataset including all major tunicate lineages, consisting of 258 evolutionarily conserved orthologous genes from representative species. Phylogenetic analyses using site-heterogeneous CAT mixture models of amino acid sequence evolution resulted in a strongly supported tree topology resolving the relationships among four major tunicate clades: (1) Appendicularia, (2) Thaliacea + Phlebobranchia + Aplousobranchia, (3) Molgulidae, and (4) Styelidae + Pyuridae. Notably, the morphologically derived Thaliacea are confirmed as the sister group of the clade uniting Phlebobranchia + Aplousobranchia within which the precise position of the model ascidian genus Ciona remains uncertain. Relaxed molecular clock analyses accommodating the accelerated evolutionary rate of tunicates reveal ancient diversification (~ 450–350 million years ago) among the major groups and allow one to compare their evolutionary age with respect to the major vertebrate model lineages. Our study represents the most comprehensive phylogenomic dataset for the main tunicate lineages. It offers a reference phylogenetic framework and first tentative timescale for tunicates, allowing a direct comparison with vertebrate model species in comparative genomics and evolutionary developmental biology studies.
TL;DR: A second group of invertebrates belonging to the Styelidae (Stolidobranchia), including 17 species of which one is new and new records for two other species are described and the geographic distribution given.
Abstract: An inventory of the marine benthic fauna around Martinique was the aim of the European Madibenthos expedition 2016. Among a large number of invertebrates abundant ascidians were collected: the phlebobranchs were already studied and the results published (Monniot 2018). A second group, belonging to the Styelidae (Stolidobranchia), includes 17 species of which one is new and new records for two other species. Each of them is described and the geographic distribution given.
TL;DR: The species presents a seasonal life cycle with a spring-summer regression of the zooids and their buds as known in the congeneric species B. leachii, from which however differs in many unusual morphological traits.
Abstract: Botrylloides crystallinus n. sp., collected on sublittoral hard substrata in North Mediterranean Sea is here described. The species presents a seasonal life cycle with a spring-summer regression of the zooids and their buds as known in the congeneric species B. leachii (Savigny, 1816), from which however differs in many unusual morphological traits.
TL;DR: This paper deals with the styelid ascidians which dr. P. HUMMELINCK entrusted to me and whose study has formed the subject of a student’s nine-month practical course in taxonomy.
Abstract: During a voyage to the West Indies undertaken in 1963-1964 Dr. P. WAGENAAR HUMMELINCK collected many specimens of marine organisms from Piscadera Baai, Curacao, as a basis for the compilation of a preliminary list of the local fauna and flora. This paper deals with the styelid ascidians which dr. HUMMELINCK entrusted to me and whose study has formed the subject of a student’s nine-month practical course in taxonomy. Only three species, amongst the material collected from Piscadera Bay, seemed to be well enough characterized for them not to need revision. They are Styela partita (Stimpson), 1852, Polyandrocarpa (Eusynstyela) tincta (Van Name), 1902, and Symplegma viride Herdman, 1886. It has, therefore, been necessary to compare my material with earlier collections.
TL;DR: A vesicle which contains moderately electron-dense material has been found at the apex of mature spermatozoa in all representatives of three pleurogonan families, which suggests that pleurgonan spermatozosa also have an acrosome.
Abstract: Summary A vesicle which contains moderately electron-dense material has been found at the apex of mature spermatozoa in all representatives of three pleurogonan families: in Styela clava, Cnemidocarpa finmarkiensis and Botryllus schlosseri (family Styelidae), in Boltenia villosa and Herdmania momus (family Pyuridae), and in Molgula manhattensis (family Molgulidae). The vesicle described here resembles the acrosome of Ciona intestinalis spermatozoa. The Ciona acrosome shows structural changes at fertilization (Fukumoto, M., J. Ultrastruct. Res., 87 (1984) 252–262). This suggests that pleurogonan spermatozoa also have an acrosome. Some speculations are presented on ascidian fertilization.