News Release
Sea Squirt Invasion: Scientists Gather at WHOI for First International Conference
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Media Relations Office
April 20, 2005
(508) 289-3340
Shelley Dawicki
Scientists, natural resource managers and students from four continents
will gather at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) April 21
and 22 to discuss a growing global problem: the sea squirt.
The mysterious filter feeding organism, a didemnid also known as an
ascidian or tunicate because its body is covered by a tough “tunic”,
first appeared in New England waters about fifteen years ago. Often
resembling scrambled eggs, this invasive species grows quickly and
covers clam and mussel beds, seaweed, floating docks and pilings,
becoming a nuisance but also an economic threat. It has no known
predators.
Simply called the “blob” by many, the organism thrives in spring and
summer but can grow year round. It is spreading rapidly and is found in
coastal waters from Maine to Long Island Sound and offshore on Georges
Bank. Through DNA analysis, scientists have learned that the same
species is living in other temperate areas around the world, from New
Zealand and California to New England and the Netherlands.
“It is a global threat, and we don’t even know what species we are
dealing with,” said Mary Carman, organizer of the first International
Invasive Sea Squirt Conference. “There are many unanswered questions.
Is it a species that has not previously been identified? Is it a
species that has been described but we haven’t figured out which one?
Or is it a newly evolved species?”
Carman has been studying the creatures for years, often collecting
samples in Sandwich. She says didemnids can change shape and
extend long tendrils when attached to pilings or floating docks. Since
they are filter feeders, they use a siphon in their bodies to filter
water containing plankton, bacteria and other food, which gets trapped
on a mucus sheet. The water and waste is excreted through a
second siphon. It is a colonial animal, comprising many individual
animals called zooids, and can grow from less than an inch to about
three feet.
The first International Invasive Sea Squirt Conference at the Woods
Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) has attracted about 100
researchers from nine nations, including Canada, New Zealand, the
Netherlands, Denmark, England, Spain, Brazil, Japan, Brazil and the
US. The conference is being supported by the Ocean Life Institute
at WHOI, the Northeast Fisheries Science Center of the National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration, the MIT Sea Grant program, the WHOI Sea
Grant program, the US Geological Survey, and the Northeast Aquatic
Nuisance Species Panel.
Originally published: April 20, 2005

