Phallusia nigra is a solitary marine tunicate of the ascidian class found in tropical seas around the world. It usually lives in shallow waters, attached to any hard substrate.[2][3]

Phallusia nigra
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Subphylum: Tunicata
Class: Ascidiacea
Order: Phlebobranchia
Family: Ascidiidae
Genus: Phallusia
Species:
P. nigra
Binomial name
Phallusia nigra
Savigny, 1816 [1]
Synonyms[1]
List
  • Ascidia atra Lesueur, 1823
  • Ascidia nigra (Savigny, 1816)
  • Ascidia somalensis Sluiter, 1905
  • Ascidia somaliensis Sluiter, 1905
  • Phallusia atra (Lesueur, 1823)
  • Phallusia violacea Gould, 1852
  • Phallusiopsis nigra (Savigny, 1816)
  • Thallusia nigra (Savigny, 1816)
  • Tunica nigra (Savigny, 1816)

Like all tunicates, P. nigra has a thick leathery envelope (tunic) containing cellulosic material. Like all solitary ascidians, the tunic encloses a sac-shaped body with separate water entrance and exit tubes (siphons). It lives on plankton that it filters from seawater with a mucous net. This tunicate is often host to the small symbiotic pea crab Tunicotheres moseri which takes up residence in its atrial chamber.[4]

An adult P. nigra may be 10 cm (4 in) long. The tunic is usually velvet black or dark brown, but may be gray in specimens that are younger or live in shaded areas. Its original range is unclear; the tropical Western Atlantic Ocean, the Red Sea, and the Indian Ocean have been proposed.[2]

The tunic of P. nigra contains many vesicles filled with a strong acid (with pH near 1), containing mostly sulphate SO
4
2− and chloride (Cl
) anions. The vesicles are concentrated towards the outer surface and are easily ruptured by contact; they are believed to protect the animal from predation and fouling.[5]

Substances extracted from the dried tunic with methanol have been found to have cytotoxic, antibacterial, antipyretic, analgesic, and histamine-like activity.[6][7][8]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Sanamyan, K., Monniot, C. (2012). Shenkar N, Gittenberger A, Lambert G, Rius M, Moreira Da Rocha R, Swalla BJ, Turon X (eds.). "Phallusia nigra Savigny, 1816". Ascidiacea World Database. World Register of Marine Species. Retrieved 2012-10-26.
  2. ^ a b "Phallusia nigra". Bishop Museum, University of Hawaii. Accessed on 2011-11-23.
  3. ^ Rocha, Rosana Moreira da; Lotufo, Tito Monteiro da Cruz; Rodrigues, Sérgio de Almeida (January 1999). "The biology of Phallusia nigra Savigny, 1816 (Tunicata: Ascidiacea) in southern Brazil: Spatial distribution and reproductive cycle". Bulletin of Marine Science. 64 (1): 77–88. INIST 1785659.
  4. ^ Lopez Greco, L.S.; Bolanos, J.; Rodriguez, Marcelo; Hernandez, G. (2001). "Survival and Molting of the Pea Crab Larvae Tunicotheres moseri Rathbun 1918 (Brachyura, Pinnotheridae) Exposed to Copper". Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology. 40: 505–510. doi:10.1007/s002440010203.
  5. ^ Hirose, Euichi; Yamashiro, Hideyuki; Mori, Yasuaki (2001). "Properties of Tunic Acid in the Ascidian Phallusia nigra (Ascidiidae, Phlebobranchia)". Zoological Science. 18 (3): 309–14. doi:10.2108/zsj.18.309.
  6. ^ Jaffarali, Hajamohideen Abdul; Tamilselvi, Madasamy; Sivakumar, Velayudham (2008). "Antibacterial activity of the marine ascidians Phallusia nigraand Herdmania pallida from the Tuticorin coast, India" (PDF). Journal of Biological Research-Thessaloniki. 10: 171–9.
  7. ^ Costa, LV; Malpezzi, EL; Matsui, DH; Machado-Santelli, GM; Freitas, JC (1996). "Cytotoxic activity of a methanol extract of Phallusia nigra (Tunicata, Ascidiacea)". Brazilian Journal of Medical and Biological Research. 29 (3): 367–73. PMID 8736132.
  8. ^ Costa, Letı́cia V; Malpezzi, Elena LA; Berlinck, Roberto GS; Rowan, Edward G; De Freitas, José Carlos (1997). "This Histamine-Like Effects of Phallusia nigra Extract: Evidences for Direct Activity at H1 Receptors". Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology C. 117 (1): 111–5. doi:10.1016/S0742-8413(96)00228-9. PMID 9185333.