About 29,700 results
Open links in new tab
  1. Tunicate - Wikipedia

    Colonial tunicate with multiple openings in a single tunic. Colonies of tunicates occur in a range of forms, and vary in the degree to which individual organisms, known as zooids, integrate with …

  2. Tunicate | Anatomy, Habitat & Adaptations | Britannica

    Tunicate, any member of the subphylum Tunicata (Urochordata) of the phylum Chordata. Small marine animals, they are found in great numbers throughout the seas of the world.

  3. Tunicate - Examples, Characteristics, Anatomy, and Pictures

    Oct 28, 2025 · What is a tunicate. How and what do they feed. Where do they live and reproduce. Learn their types, classification, organ system, and development with images.

  4. What's a Tunicate? - UW Departments Web Server

    What's a Tunicate? Tunicates, commonly called sea squirts, are a group of marine animals that spend most of their lives attached to docks, rocks or the undersides of boats. To most people …

  5. Tunicate - New World Encyclopedia

    The tunicate's pharynx is covered by miniature hairs called ciliated cells that allow the consumed plankton to pass down through to the esophagus. Tunicates are also the only animals able to …

  6. Tunicates—Not So Spineless Invertebrates - Smithsonian Ocean

    The name “tunicate” comes from their outer covering, called the tunic, that protects the animal from predators, like sea stars, snails and fish. Unlike the sessile sea squirts, other kinds of …

  7. Tunicates Explained - Features, Facts, and Examples

    This variety of lifestyles helps tunicates thrive in nearly every marine habitat. Meet the travelers of the tunicate family and find out how sea salps form incredible chains and help clean our …

  8. What Is a Tunicate? A Surprising Marine Chordate

    The tunicate life cycle begins with a free-swimming “tadpole larva,” a motile stage seeking a suitable settlement site. This larval form is short-lived, lasting only hours to days, as it does not …

  9. Tunicates - Coral Digest

    Thaliaceans, a type of tunicate, are mostly transparent and this allows them to escape predators as they are also free-swiming, and are difficult to detect. Some tunicates are also …

  10. Tunicates aka Sea Squirts | Department of Marine Resources

    The pancake batter tunicate is generally more tan in color, with individuals more randomly arranged but with small white dots in the tunic. This tunicate has earned the name “pancake …