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doliolids

Doliolids are small, pelagic tunicates in the order Doliolida, class Thaliacea, phylum Chordata. They are gelatinous, free-swimming organisms that inhabit open-ocean waters around the world and feed by filtering suspended particles from seawater.

They have a barrel-shaped, transparent body, typically a few millimeters to a few centimeters in length. Water

Dolioids are planktonic suspension feeders found in both warm and temperate seas, often in nutrient-rich surface

Doliolids have a complex life cycle typical of thaliaceans, involving alternating generations that can reproduce both

The order includes several genera, such as Doliolum and Dolioletta, with multiple species described in warm

enters
and
exits
through
incurrent
and
excurrent
siphons;
a
pharyngeal
basket
with
slits
extracts
food
particles,
aided
by
a
mucous
net
secreted
by
the
endostyle.
A
ring
of
circular
muscles
powers
jet-like
locomotion.
layers
but
occasionally
at
mid
depths.
They
consume
phytoplankton
and
tiny
zooplankton
and
are
themselves
prey
for
many
small
fish,
chaetognaths,
and
other
gelatinous
zooplankton.
sexually
and
asexually.
This
can
lead
to
rapid
population
growth
under
favorable
conditions.
and
temperate
oceans.
They
are
minute
to
moderate
in
size
and
contribute
to
oceanic
food
webs
and
carbon
cycling
through
their
delicate
bodies
when
organisms
die
or
are
consumed.