Invasion History

First Non-native Panama (Pacific) Tidal Record: 1973
First Non-native Panama (Caribbean) Tidal Record: 1971

Panama Invasion History:


Invasion history elsewhere in the world:

The long-established range of Styela plicata along the Western Atlantic is from Cape Lookout, North Carolina (USNM 14790, U.S. National Museum of Natural History 2007) to Padre Island, Texas (USNM 14424, U.S. National Museum of Natural History 2007), and south through the Caribbean to Venezuela (Van Name 1945; USNM 14481, U.S. National Museum of Natural History 2007). In 1884, S. plicata was reported from St. Thomas, US Virgin Islands/Caribbean Sea (USNM 6916, U.S. National Museum of Natural History 2007), and from Bermuda in 1882 (USNM 2769, U.S. National Museum of Natural History 2007) suggesting that it was established and widespread in warm waters of the Western Atlantic by the late 19th century.

Styela plicata was collected from Panama in 1973 (USNM 19744, US National Museum of Natural History 2007). Nearly a century before, in 1883, it was collected from Rio de Janeiro state, Brazil (Trautstedt 1883, cited by da Rocha and Kremer 2005), It ranges south to Uruguay (Orensanz et al. 2002), but in Bahia, northern Brazil, it was known only from 'one individual' (da Rocha and Kremer 2005).

Styela plicata is considered introduced to the Mediterranean: ['This species is not native to the Mediterranean, but was introduced centuries ago. It is present in all warm-temperate and tropical regions, especially in zones of human activity.'] (C. F. Monniot, in Food and Agricultural Organization 2000). It was collected from Naples (Traustedt 1877, cited by Kott 1985) and Trieste, Italy (Heller 1877, cited by Kott 1998). Outside the Mediterranean, it has been collected from Dakar, Senegal (Monniot 1969).

In the Northwest Pacific, S. plicata ranges from Hong Kong (Huang 2001) to Mutsu Bay, at the north end of Honshu, Japan (Oka 1935, cited by Nishikawa 1991). Within the Indian Ocean, it has been collected from Vizhinjam, India, on the Arabian Sea (Abdul and Sivakumar 2007), Somalia (in 1964, USNM 18297, U.S. National Museum of Natural History 2007), and the Gulf of Suez (in 1927, Monniot 2002). These scattered records could represent introductions.

In the Southwest Pacific, S. plicata was first collected at Port Jackson, near Sydney, Australia (Heller 1878, cited by Kott 1985). Its range runs from the mouth of the Calliope River, Queensland to Port Phillip Bay (in 1963, Millar 1966, cited by Keough and Ross 1999), and west to Cockburn Sound and the Perth area (Hartmeyer and Michaelsen 1928, cited by Kott 1985). Within this range, it is strongly associated with harbors and artificial structures (Kott 1985; Keough and Ross 1999). A genetic survey indicates high diversity in Australian populations, with significant genetic structure in more southern latitudes, but no structure in tropical latitudes (David et al. 2010). In New Zealand, it has been reported at several locations on the North Island, including Auckland Harbour and Hauraki Gulf (in 1957, Cranfield et al. 1998), Gulf Harbour Marina (Inglis et al. 2005), and Taranaki (Inglis et al. 2006).


Description

Styela plicata is a solitary tunicate, variable in shape, but roughly oval. It is fixed to the substrate by the posterior end of its body, usually without roots or stalks. Its tunic is firm and thick, slightly translucent, with deep, irregular, longitudinal furrows, and horizontal creases that form large, irregularly rounded lumps.  Its total body length can reach 90 mm. The oral siphon is terminal, and the atrial siphon is a little behind it – both siphons are short, with square apertures with rounded humps on each side. The color of the tunic is whitish with brown or black stripes radiating from the siphons (Van Name 1945; Kott 1985; Nishikawa 1991; Gretchen Lambert, personal communication 2012).


Taxonomy

Taxonomic Tree

Kingdom:   Animalia
Phylum:   Chordata
Subphylum:   Tunicata
Class:   Ascidiacea
Order:   Stolidobranchia
Family:   Styelidae
Genus:   Styela
Species:   plicata

Synonyms

Ascidia plicata (Lesueur, 1823)
Styela gyrosa (Heller, 1883)
Styela pinguis (Herdman, 1899)
Tethyum plicatum (Hartmeyer, 1909)
Ascidia cuvieri (Delle Chiaje, 1841)
Ascidia patata (Costa, 1844)
Ascidia phusca (Delle Chiaje, 1828)
Phallusia sulcata (Delle Chiaje, 1841)

Potentially Misidentified Species

Styela multicapa
New species intorduced to Caribbean Panama and Venezuela, of unkknown origin (de Barros and da Rocha 2021).

Styela panamensis
New species, native to Caribbean Panama. Records of S. plicata from Bocas del Toro, Panama, may refer to S. panamensis.

Ecology

General:

Life History- A solitary tunicate is ovoid, elongate or vase-like in shape, with two openings or siphons. Most solitary tunicates attach to substrates by their side or base, but some attach with a conspicuous stalk. They are sessile filter feeders with two siphons, an oral and an atrial siphon. Water is pumped in through the oral siphon, where phytoplankton and detritus is filtered by the gills, and passed on mucus strings to the stomach and intestines. Waste is then expelled in the outgoing atrial water.

Solitary ascidians are hermaphroditic, meaning that both eggs and sperm are released to the atrial chamber. Eggs may be self-fertilized or fertilized by sperm from nearby animals, but many species have a partial block to self-fertilization. Depending on the species, eggs may be externally or internally fertilized. In external fertilizers, eggs and sperm are released through the atrial siphon into the surrounding water column were fertilization takes place. In internal fertilizers, eggs are brooded and fertilized within the atrial chamber and then released into the water column upon hatching. Fertilized eggs hatch into a tadpole larva with a muscular tail, notochord, eyespots, and a set of adhesive papillae. The lecithotrophic (non-feeding, yolk-dependent) larva swims briefly before settlement. Swimming periods are usually less than a day and some larvae settle immediately after release, but the larval period can be longer at lower temperatures. Once settled, the tail is absorbed, the gill basket expands, and the tunicate begins to feed by filtering (Barnes 1983).

Food:

Phytoplankton

Trophic Status:

Suspension Feeder

SusFed

Habitats

General HabitatMarinas & DocksNone
General HabitatOyster ReefNone
General HabitatVessel HullNone
General HabitatCanalsNone
General HabitatMangrovesNone
General HabitatRockyNone
General HabitatSalt-brackish marshNone
Salinity RangePolyhaline18-30 PSU
Salinity RangeEuhaline30-40 PSU
Tidal RangeSubtidalNone
Vertical HabitatEpibenthicNone

Life History


Tolerances and Life History Parameters

Maximum Temperature (ºC)30.2Field, US East & West Coast marinas (Lord et al. 2015)
Minimum Salinity (‰)17.5Experimental- This was tested experimentally with animals at Santa Barbara CA. Only '75% seawater' (26 ppt), '50% seawater' (18ppt), and '110% seawater' (38.5 ppt) were used (Sims 1984).
Maximum Salinity (‰)40Field salinity (Shark Bay, Western Australia) (Wyatt et al. 2005)
Minimum Reproductive Temperature18Experimental- Lowest temperature tested for embryonic development and metamorphosis (Thiyagarajan and Qian 2003).
Maximum Reproductive Temperature30Experimental- Highest temperature tested for embryonic development and metamorphosis. Only 30% of larvae successfully completed development (Thiyagarajan and Qian 2003).
Minimum Reproductive Salinity30Experimental- Development was observed at 22, 26, 30, and 34 ppt. Embryonic development was unsuccessful at 22 and 26 ppt (Thiyagarajan and Qian 2003).
Maximum Reproductive Salinity34Experimental- Highest salinity tested (Thiyagarajan and Qian 2003).
Minimum Duration0Larvae can attach immediately after hatching (Thiyagarajan and Qian 2003).
Maximum Duration2Larvae prevented from settling (Thiyagarajan and Qian 2003).
Maximum Length (mm)90Van Name 1945
Broad Temperature RangeNoneWarm temperate-Tropical
Broad Salinity RangeNonePolyhaline-Euhaline

General Impacts

Economic Impacts

Fisheries: Styela plicata is known to foul cultured bivalves, interfering with their growth in Brazil, Hong Kong, Japan, and Spain (da Rocha et al. 2009).

Ecological Impacts

Competition: Styela plicata has been a dominant fouling organism in southern California harbors since 1960 (Lambert and Lambert 1998). It dominates fouling communities from Ensenada, Mexico to Santa Barbara (Lambert and Lambert 2003). It and other introduced ascidians have replaced the native species Pyura haustor and Ascidia ceratodes from southern California harbors (Lambert and Lambert 1998). Styela plicata was one of the dominant fouling organisms on fouling plates at Beaufort, North Carolina. It invaded plates initially dominated by other species and created 'monopolies,' for up to four months (Sutherland and Karlson 1977). Settled juveniles of Styela plicata inhibited settlement of the native Microcosmus squamiger (from Brisbane, Australia), in a laboratory experiment (Ruis et al. 2009). The mechanism was not clear, but could involve competition for food or allelopathy (inhibitory chemicals).

Fisheries: Styela plicata is known to foul cultured bivalves, interfering with their growth in Brazil, Hong Kong, Japan, and Spain (da Rocha et al. 2009). On the positive side, S. plicata is extensively cultured on long lines in Korea and Japan (Lambert et al. 2016).


Regional Distribution Map

Bioregion Region Name Year Invasion Status Population Status
PAN_PAC Panama Pacific Coast 1973 Non-native Unknown
PAN_CAR Panama Caribbean Coast 1971 Non-native Established

Occurrence Map

OCC_ID Author Year Date Locality Status Latitude Longitude
4604 USNM 19744 1973 1973-04-15 Whorehouse Reef Non-native 8.8333 -79.2500
4658 U.S. National Museum of Natural History 2007 1971 1971-04-20 None Non-native 9.3736 -79.9533
4671 da Rocha et al. 2005 2003 2003-08-12 Isla Colon Non-native 9.4000 -82.2833

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