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    Botryllus schlosseri - Wikipedia

    Botryllus schlosseri is a colonial ascidian tunicate. It is commonly known as the star tunicate, but it also has several other common names, including star ascidian and golden star tunicate. Colonies grow on slow-moving, submerged objects, plants, and animals in nearshore saltwater environments. See more

    Individual zooids may grow to 3 millimetres (0.12 in) in size, with colonies reaching 50 millimetres (2.0 in) long .
    This species can be distinguished from Botrylloides sp. by the pattern of zooid growth. B. … See more

    The native range of Botryllus schlosseri is the north eastern Atlantic Ocean, the Mediterranean Sea and the North Sea. Its range has spread … See more

    The genome has been sequenced. It is 580 megabases in length organised into 16 chromosomes. It contains nearly 14,000 intron containing predicted genes and 13,500 intron-less predicted genes. The data also confirmed that the Tunicata are the closest … See more

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    Botryllus schlosseri is used as a model organism. Clones have been maintained in continuous laboratory culture for several decades, with new adults developing from buds that form from the body wall of existing adults. Under typical culture conditions, asexual … See more

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  2. Botryllus - Wikipedia

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    Botryllus schlosseri is a colonial ascidian tunicate. It is commonly known as the star tunicate, but it also has several other common names, including star ascidian and golden star tunicate. Colonies grow on slow-moving, submerged objects, plants, and animals in nearshore saltwater environments.
    Botryllus is a genus of colonial ascidian tunicates in the family Styelidae . Species in this genus include: ^ "WoRMS - World Register of Marine Species - Botryllus Gaertner, 1774". www.marinespecies.org. Retrieved 10 September 2015.
    en.wikipedia.org
    Abstract. Botryllus schlosseri is a model colonial ascidian and a marine invader. It is currently recognized as a species complex comprising five genetical
    Its range has spread over the last 100 years to a nearly worldwide extent. Ranging in the western Atlantic Ocean from the Bay of Fundy to North Carolina, it is regarded as an invasive species and is "the most common colonial tunicate in North America." Botryllus schlosseri is used as a model organism.
    More specifically, we isolated the Botryllus schlosseri (transcriptome) sequences from the aforementioned alignments, and using those as a reference scanned the Botryllus schlosseri genome for the AHE regions.
    As shown in Fig. 4, both the Bayesian and the ML phylogenetic trees recognize the Botryllus schlosseri species complex as a monophyletic group and identify clade E as the sister group of clade A (bootstrap: 100%; and Bayesian Posterior Probability (BPP): 0.99).
  4. Toward a resolution of the cosmopolitan - Oxford Academic

  5. Botryllus schlosseri - Smithsonian Institution

    WEBDescription. Taxonomy- Tunicates of the genus Botryllus are colonial tunicates, in which groups of 5-20 zooids are organized around shared cloacal (excurrent) openings in a star-like pattern (Van Name …

  6. Botryllus schlosseri - Smithsonian Institution

    WEBDescription. Botryllus schlosseri is a colonial tunicate that can form colonies as large as 25 mm x 150 mm and up to 2 mm thick. Color is highly variable within and among colonies, and can be yellow, dark purple, red, brown …

  7. Star ascidian (Botryllus schlosseri) - MarLIN - The Marine Life ...

  8. The colonial tunicate Botryllus schlosseri: A key species for ...

  9. Phylogenomic and morphological relationships among the …

  10. Botryllus schlosseri—A Model Colonial Species in Basic and …

  11. The Onset of Whole-Body Regeneration in Botryllus schlosseri ...