Locomotion
- Also called:
- urochordate
- Related Topics:
- sea squirt
- larvacean
- salp
- Thaliacea
- Pyrosomida
Tadpole larvae and appendicularians swim by undulating the tail, which contains a stiff notochord. Despite their sessile lifestyles, some adult ascidians can move by attaching with one area of the body and letting go with another. Movement of colonies up to 1.5 centimetres per day has been recorded. In thaliaceans an exhalant current of water, which in dolioloids and salps is combined with a strong muscular contraction, creates a jet stream that propels the animal forward.
Food and feeding
An internal mucous sheet, secreted by the endostyle, allows ascidians and thaliaceans to utilize a variety of organisms, especially small plants (phytoplankton) as their food source (see below Internal features: Digestion, nutrition, and excretion). Some trap small animals. The feeding mechanism is different in appendicularians. Glands on the surface of the body secrete a complex house made up of mucus, which surrounds the animal. Undulations of the tail produce a feeding current that draws water into the house and through a fine sheet of mucus, which serves as a net to filter the food. Appendicularians feed on microscopic organisms (nannoplankton).
Associations
Tunicates often host various parasitic animals. Some tunicates, especially in the tropics, live symbiotically with unicellular plants and blue-green algae that may supply them with food.
Form and function
General features
A tunicate tadpole larva contains several chordate features, such as the notochord, dorsal nerve cord, and tail. These features are lost, however, as the larva metamorphoses into the adult form. The tunicate larva has special organs of sense and attachment, which it uses to find and occupy a suitable habitat. Once the larva has attached to a substrate by its anterior end, the larval features quickly regress and considerable changes in size and proportion of parts take place. For example, the notochord, nerve cord, and most of the tail are generally resorbed within one day. The area between the mouth and the point of attachment grows rapidly until the mouth comes to be directed away from the point of attachment, which now becomes the posterior end of the animal. The atrium usually forms from a pair of pouches that grow inward and fuse into a single cavity that opens near the mouth on what is technically the dorsal area of the body.
External features
A solitary tunicate has two major openings, or siphons, on the surface away from the area of attachment: a branchial aperture, through which water enters the body, and an atrial aperture, through which water, wastes, and gametes leave. Water circulation is produced by ciliary activity on the animal’s pharynx. The animal is covered with a thick tunic, which consists of some cells, blood vessels, and a secretion of a variety of proteins and carbohydrates, including cellulose, which, although abundant in plants, is unusual in animals.
Some solitary, sessile ascidians are stalked, and budding commonly occurs by growth at the base of the animal. In “social” colonial ascidians the zooids are relatively independent, whereas in “compound” colonial ascidians budding gives rise to a colony in which the zooids are embedded in a common tunic. Several zooids may share a single, common cloacal aperture through which water exits, but each zooid has its own branchial aperture through which water enters.
Internal features
Skeleton, tissues, and muscles
The tunic functions to some extent as an external skeleton that supports and protects the body. Additional support is provided by body fluids and connective tissue. Firm proteinaceous rods also may support the branchial apparatus.
Although musculature is poorly developed in tunicates, there are muscles that retract the body and constrict the atrial cavity, allowing it to eject water. In dolioloids and salps, these muscles have become modified so as to produce jet propulsion.
Nervous system and organs of sensation
In the tadpole larvae and appendicularians, the dorsal nerve cord is well developed. At the anterior end there are usually sensory structures, which detect light and orient the animal to gravity. Similar sensory structures can be found in adult thaliaceans. Special organs of sense are otherwise poorly developed. When the larva metamorphoses into an adult, the original nervous system and sensory organs degenerate, leaving a single ganglion between the oral and atrial openings. Nerves grow to the various organs of the body from this ganglion.
Digestion, nutrition, and excretion
In ascidians and thaliaceans the beating action of pharyngeal cilia creates a water current. As the water is driven from the branchial sac into the atrial cavity, a sheet of mucus, secreted by the endostyle, traps a variety of very small organisms suspended in the water current, especially small plantlike protists (phytoplankton). The mucus is rolled into a cord and then conveyed to the intestine, where it is digested and absorbed. A stomach and glands may be present. The intestine ends as an anus in the atrium below the atrial aperture. Wastes are ejected through this aperture in a stream of water.
Metabolic wastes, such as the breakdown products of protein, are excreted at various parts of the body, including the surfaces of the gills and the intestine, and sometimes by a discrete kidney. In many cases wastes are stored as solid deposits rather than being excreted from the body as they are produced.
Respiration
Gas exchange occurs across the gill and also across various other body surfaces, such as the lining of the atrium.
Water/vascular system
Tunicates do not have the well-developed secondary body cavity (coelom) of other chordates, but traces of one perhaps are represented by cavities around the heart and by an extension of the gut called the epicardium around some of the internal organs. The body cavities are considered to be a part of the circulatory system. There are a heart and some large blood vessels but no tiny capillaries. The tunicate heart is unusual in that it periodically reverses the direction in which it pumps the blood, but the reasons for this behaviour are unknown. There are many different cell types in the blood.
Hormones
A variety of possible endocrine organs help to coordinate feeding and reproduction. Various chemical substances are known to act as hormones in vertebrates; however, their exact role in the tunicates is uncertain.
Features of defense and aggression
The tunic provides ascidians with some defense. They also may be protected by chemicals (such as sulfuric acid) that make them distasteful to predators. Appendicularians are small and therefore difficult to see. If attacked, they can escape from the house and form a new one. Thaliaceans are protected somewhat by transparency and can evade some predators by quickly ejecting a jet stream of water. They have well-developed light-producing organs, which may help to deter predators.