Saltcorner
By Bob Goemans
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Family Clavelinidae

Clavelina lepadiformis

Muller, 1776

Sea Squirt

Likely Reef Tank Suitable

Likely Fish-Only Tank Suitable

Range: Western Atlantic Ocean: Southern Florida and the Bahamas.

Natural Environment: Inhabits hard substrates, and usually seen under overhangs.

Aquarium Suitability: Not purposely collected for the home aquarium trade.

Forms clusters and rarely ever seen in the home aquarium trade/available for purchase.

Yet may, yet extremely rarely, inadvertently occur on coral specimens/live rock from areas of their collection.

Requires special attention to feeding requirements. For those that want to maintain them, they require numerous feedings per day of live and/or preserved commercial phytoplankton/zooplankton products or that of animal and plant powders that produce suspended products in the bulk water and/or bacteria laden waters.

Proper placement is also quite important. Generally, most prefer low light and do better with indirect light and gentle water movement.

Besides being difficult to maintain, they have a very short life span, usually about one year and sometimes far less. Only those willing to provide for their demanding level of care should attempt keeping them in closed systems. Actually, 99.9% should be left in the wild.

Taxonomy:

    Kingdom: Animalia

    Phylum: Chordata

    Class: Ascidiacea

    Order: Aplousobranchia

    Family: Clavelinidae

    Genus: Clavelina

FYI: Shown here for identification only.

 Clavelina lepadiformis (Sea Squirt)
Photo © Keith Hiscock
 Clavelina lepadiformis (Sea Squirt)
Photo © Wikimedia
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