Perophora annectens Ritter, 1893
Figure 10H
IHAK 37 BHAK 1705 UF 2522. Crazy Town surge channel, Scuba, 5 m. Large colony on kelp holdfast with Styela truncata Ritter, 1901 .
IHAK 44 BHAK 1719 UF 2531. Rattenbury Pinnacle, Scuba, 21 m. On filamentous red alga .
MHAK 14 BHAK 0622. Tippy Rock Bay low intertidal with Boltenia villosa (Stimpson, 1864) and Metandrocarpa taylori .
This species is usually found as an epibiont growing over solitary ascidians or various algal species. The small zooids up to 3 mm in height are connected by stolons; colonies may be quite large and composed of hundreds of zooids. Rarely some of the zooids in a colony may be completely embedded in a common transparent tunic, though in each zooid the siphons open independently at the tunic surface. Zooids are yellowish-green with four rows of stigmata. Reproduction is both sexual with the embryos incubated in a special pouch in the atrial area, or asexual by stolonic budding. A detailed morphological description is given by Ritter (1893), Huntsman (1912b), and Van Name (1945). This is a common native species from southern Alaska to southern California on both natural and artificial surfaces (Huntsman 1912b; Van Name 1945; Abbott & Newberry 1980; O’Clair & O’Clair 1998; Lamb & Hanby 2005).