Clavelina ossipandae is a small colonial tunicate, found in colonies of one to four zooids. Unlike in the related genera
Euclavella and
Nephtheis, zooids are free, meaning they do not share a common tunic, although they extend from a basal mass and are connected to each other through vascular
stolons. Individual zooids have been reported to be up to long, with sampled specimens ranging from long.
Anatomy Each zooid is covered in its own transparent
tunic, which like in most sea squirts possesses two visible openings, the
oral and atrial siphons. The oral siphon, through which food particles are drawn into the
pharynx, is surrounded by 10 oral tentacles. The pharynx is the main cavity in which food is filtered, funneled through a dorsal tubercle with a
ciliated slit-like opening. The back side of the pharynx is lined with a series of tongue-shaped dorsal languets that help transport food. An
endostyle, another organ assisting in filter-feeding, is present on the front side below the oral siphon. The
esophagus connects the pharynx to the stomach in the middle of the abdomen, followed by a tube-like intestinal loop. The latter leads to the anus, where waste is expelled through the atrial siphon. The tunic is divided into thoracic and abdominal segments, almost equal in length, although the thoracic tunic is thinner and softer than its abdominal counterpart. The thorax bears 10–11 pairs of longitudinal muscle bands, with 2 running from the abdomen to the endostyle, 5–6 to the oral siphon and 2–4 to the dorsal side.
Patterns Specimens bear several white transverse blood vessels along their length, giving the appearance of a series of ribs. The black endostyle is visible below the oral siphon, as well as a mid-dorsal black line below the atrial siphon.
Clavelina ossipandae is also recognizable by the black markings on its white anterior portion (a central dot between the oral and atrial siphons, surrounded by two lateral bands), uniquely distinctive in the genus
Clavelina. Two other species in the genus are known to bear similar patterns, although they differ in color, being dark blue on light blue in
C. moluccensis and blue on yellow in
C. viola.
Life cycle Clavelina ossipandae specimens are
hermaphroditic: they possess both ovaries and testicular follicles, attached to the left side of the intestine beyond the stomach. A
brood pouch is present on the back of the thorax, where eggs and larvae develop. Like in all tunicates, larvae are motile and tadpole-shaped. They measure around in length, of which the tail comprises . The larval body is divided into a frontal plate, with three adhesive papillae, and a trunk bearing an ocellus and an otolith. Like other colonial sea squirts in its genus,
Clavelina ossipandae can also reproduce asexually through
budding. == Taxonomy ==