Phallusia mammillata is a solitary ascidian. This marine invertebrate belongs to the subphylum Urochordata (Tunicates). Appendicularia, Thaliaceae and Ascidiacea constitute the three Urochordata classes.
Phallusia mammillata is found on European coasts, along the Atlantic and Mediterranean seaboards.
Urochordates (Tunicates), along with cephalochordates and vertebrates, form the phylum Chordata. Chordates are characterised by the presence of a dorsal neural tube and a notochord. This body plan is shared by all urochordates but only at the larval stage, with the exception of adult appendicularians which retain their tail. Upon metamorphosis, the larval notochord, the tail and the neural tube disappear. Adults (sessile; solitary or colonial) have two siphons, an incurrent buccal siphon and an excurrent atrial siphon, to filter seawater. They are sheathed in a tunic secreted by the epidermis. This tunic contains cellulose, an exceptional occurrence in the animal kingdom.
The mitochondrial genome of Phallusia mammillata has been sequenced. The genome is currently being sequenced.
Much information is available on the following site: http://www.biodev.obs-vlfr.fr/en/research_groups/fertilization_meiotic_cell_cycle_control_and_development.html