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Bigfin squid

Bigfin squids are a group of rarely seen cephalopods with a distinctive morphology. They are placed in the genus Magnapinna and family Magnapinnidae.[2] Although the family was described only from larval, paralarval, and juvenile specimens, numerous video observations of much larger squid with similar morphology are assumed to be adult specimens of the same family.[3]

Bigfin squid
A bigfin squid filmed by DSV Alvin,
possibly an adult Magnapinna sp.
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Mollusca
Class: Cephalopoda
Order: Oegopsida
Superfamily: Chiroteuthoidea
Family: Magnapinnidae
Vecchione & Young, 1998
Genus: Magnapinna
Vecchione & Young, 1998[1]
Type species
Magnapinna pacifica
Vecchione & Young, 1998
Species

The arms and tentacles of the squid are both extremely long, estimated at 4 to 8 m (13 to 26 ft). These appendages are held perpendicular to the body, creating "elbows." How the squid feeds is yet to be discovered.[4]

Magnapinna is thought to be the deepest-occurring squid genus, with sightings as deep as 6,212 metres (20,381 ft) below the surface, making it the only squid known to inhabit the hadal zone.[5][6]

Taxonomy edit

Magnapinna is the sister group to Joubiniteuthis, another bizarre, little-known deep-sea squid with an unusual body plan and long arms. Both Magnapinna and Joubiniteuthis are monotypic genera within their own families, Magnapinnidae and Joubiniteuthidae respectively. They are also closely related to the "whip-lash squid" in the families Chiroteuthidae and Mastigoteuthidae.[7]

Physical specimens edit

The first record of this family comes from a specimen (Magnapinna talismani) caught off the Azores on 10 August 1883.[8] Due to the damaged nature of the find, little information could be discerned, and it was classified as a mastigoteuthid, first as Chiroteuthopsis talismani[8] and later as Mastigoteuthis talismani. In 1956, a similar squid (Magnapinna sp. C) was caught in the South Atlantic, but little was thought of it at the time. The specimen was illustrated in Alister Hardy's The Open Sea (1956), where it was identified as Octopodoteuthis sicula.[9]

 
A juvenile Magnapinna talismani, the first known species from the family, with damaged arms

During the 1980s, two additional immature specimens were found in the Atlantic (Magnapinna sp. A), and three more were found in the Pacific (Magnapinna pacifica). Researchers Michael Vecchione and Richard Young were the chief investigators of the finds, and eventually linked them to the two previous specimens, erecting the family Magnapinnidae in 1998, with Magnapinna pacifica as the type species.[10] Of particular interest was the very large fin size, up to 90% of the mantle length, that was responsible for the animals' common name.

A single specimen of a fifth species, Magnapinna sp. B, was collected in 2006. Magnapinna sp. A was described as Magnapinna atlantica in 2006.[11]

The genus was described from two juveniles and paralarva, none of which had developed the characteristic long arm tips. However, they did all have large fins, and were therefore named "magna pinna", meaning "big fin".[12]

Sightings edit

 
The bigfin squid (possibly M. pacifica) observed north of Hawai'i in 2001, showing the extremely large fins of this specimen[3][13]

The presumed adult stage of Magnapinna is known only from video observations from submersibles and ROVs; no physical specimens have yet been collected, leaving their exact identity unknown. These individuals and the collected juvenile specimens share the very large fins and the vermiform arm tips with no suckers, but the iconic elongated arm tips are known only from observed individuals. Although it has not been directly confirmed whether these squid are the same as the Magnapinna known from specimens, it is largely accepted that they are members of Magnapinnidae.[3][14]

Although observations had been made over a decade earlier, adult bigfin squid only became known to science in 2001, when marine biology student Heather Holston sent footage of what she described as an "21-foot-long squid" to teuthologist Michael Vecchione. The footage had been recorded from an ROV in the Gulf of Mexico in January 2000 at the request of Holston's boyfriend Eric Leveton, who planned on showing it to her. Leveton was a structural engineer aboard the oil-drilling ship Millennium Explorer, who had happened to look into the ROV operation shack when the squid was observed by operators. Although Vecchione initially surmised from Holston's description that the footage might be the first video of a live giant squid (Architeuthis dux), he realized that the video itself portrayed a completely different squid that had no known identity.[15][16][17][18]

My reaction was to jump out of my chair and start yelling profanities, because I knew it was something really different.

— Michael Vecchione, on the first sighting of an adult bigfin squid[16]

Further discussions with other cephalopod researchers found no leads on the identity of the squid, and it was thus dubbed the "mystery squid" for a portion of time. Analysis by Vecchione et al of previous footage from submersibles found other video records of bigfin squid, the earliest from 1988. Around the same time, new high-quality footage of a bigfin squid was also recorded off Hawaii by the ROV Tiburon. In December 2001, Vecchione et al published a paper collating these observations; this was also the first paper to identify them as potential members of the Magnapinnidae, which had been named by Vecchione from the juvenile specimens a few years earlier.[13][16][19] Independent of Vecchione's publication, Guerra et al published a paper the following year analyzing some of the early bigfin squid footage, and also identified them as potential adult magnapinnids.[20]

Anatomy edit

The specimens in the videos looked very distinct from all previously known squids. Uniquely among cephalopods, the arms and tentacles were of the same length and looked identical (similar to extinct belemnites). The appendages were also held perpendicular to the body, creating the appearance of strange "elbows". Most remarkable was the length of the elastic tentacles, which has been estimated at up to 15–20 times the mantle length. This trait is caused by filament coiling of the tentacles, a trait that is rare among similar species.[21] Estimates based on video evidence put the total length of the largest specimens at 8 m (25 ft) or more, with some estimates up to 12 m (40 ft).[22] Viewing close-ups of the body and head, it is apparent that the fins are extremely large, being proportionately nearly as big as those of bigfin squid larvae. While they do appear similar to the larvae, no specimens or samples of the adults have been taken. While their exact identity is unknown, all of the discovered specimens can be observed to have a brown-orange color body, translucent fins, near-white tentacles, and dark eyes.[4] These species of squids are mainly identifiable by their long thin arms and specific colors. The squid also have a very unique brachial crown that sets them aside from the rest of other families that are known.[23]

Feeding behaviour edit

Little is known about the feeding-behaviour of these squids. Scientists have speculated that the bigfin squid feeds by dragging their arms and tentacles along the seafloor and grabbing edible organisms from the floor.[24] Alternatively, they may simply use a trapping technique, waiting passively for prey such as zooplankton[12] to bump into their arms[24] (see Cephalopod intelligence). The diet of the bigfin squid is unknown. However, cephalopods are known to feed on crustaceans, jellyfish, and even other cephalopods.[25]

Observation timeline edit

The first visual record of an adult bigfin squid was in September 1988. The crew of the submersible Nautile encountered a bigfin squid off the coast of northern Brazil, 10°42.91′N 40°53.43′W / 10.71517°N 40.89050°W / 10.71517; -40.89050 (Bigfin squid (first sighting 1988)), at a depth of 4,735 metres (15,535 ft). In July 1992, the Nautile again encountered these creatures, observing two individuals during a dive off the coast of Ghana at 3°40′N 2°30′W / 3.667°N 2.500°W / 3.667; -2.500 (Bigfin squid (sighting 1992)), first at 3,010 metres (9,880 ft) depth, and then again at 2,950 metres (9,680 ft). Both were filmed and photographed.[20] In November 1998, the Japanese crewed submersible Shinkai 6500 filmed another bigfin squid in the Indian Ocean south of Mauritius, at 32°45′S 57°13′E / 32.750°S 57.217°E / -32.750; 57.217 (Bigfin squid (sighting 1998)) and 2,340 metres (7,680 ft).[26]

Eric Leveton's video, which was later shared with Vecchione, was taken from the remotely operated underwater vehicle (ROV) of the oil-drilling ship Millennium Explorer in January 2000, at Mississippi Canyon in the Gulf of Mexico (28°37′N 88°00′W / 28.617°N 88.000°W / 28.617; -88.000 (Bigfin squid (sighting 2000, Millennium Explorer))) at 2,195 metres (7,201 ft), and allowed for a size estimate. By comparison with the visible parts of the ROV, the squid was estimated to measure 7 metres (23 ft) with arms fully extended.[20] The Nautile filmed another Indian Ocean specimen at 19°32′S 65°52′E / 19.533°S 65.867°E / -19.533; 65.867 (Bigfin squid (sighting 2000, Atalante)) and 2,576 metres (8,451 ft), in the area of Rodrigues Island, in May 2000.[20] In October 2000, the crewed submersible Alvin found another bigfin squid at 1,940 metres (6,360 ft) in Atwater Valley [d], Gulf of Mexico (27°34.714′N 88°30.59′W / 27.578567°N 88.50983°W / 27.578567; -88.50983 (Bigfin squid (sighting 2000, Alvin))).

These videos did not receive any media attention; most were brief and fairly blurry. In May 2001, approximately ten minutes of crisp footage of a bigfin squid were acquired by ROV Tiburon, causing a flurry of attention when released.[27] These were taken in the Pacific Ocean north of Oʻahu, Hawaii (21°54′N 158°12′W / 21.900°N 158.200°W / 21.900; -158.200 (Bigfin squid (sighting 2001))), at 3,380 metres (11,090 ft). This video and the pre-2001 videos (which had not previously received much scientific attention) were documented by Vecchione et al in a paper that year, and some of the earlier footage was further analyzed by Guerra et al (2002).[13][20]

On 11 November 2007, a bigfin squid was filmed off Perdido, a drilling-site owned by Shell Oil Company, located 200 statute miles or 320 km off Houston, Texas in the Gulf of Mexico. The ROV that filmed the squid had originally been sent to retrieve drilling equipment from the seabed, and encountered the squid floating near a well. After being circulated within the oil industry, the footage was shared with National Geographic News to have its identity determined, and was released to the public in 2008. This video received significant online attention in the years since its filming.[24][28][29]

 
A bigfin squid filmed by Okeanos Explorer in 2021

Observations of bigfin squid were made in the Great Australian Bight during towed camera and remote operated vehicle surveys in 2015 and 2017 respectively.[4] In 2018, the first observations of a bigfin squid were made from the Southern Caribbean, off the coast of Colombia.[30]

In March 2021, during the expedition to document the wreck of the USS Johnston, the submersible DSV Limiting Factor recorded footage of a juvenile bigfin squid from the Philippine Trench at a depth of 6,212 metres (20,381 ft). This is the deepest observation of any squid, and rivalled only by some unidentified cirrate octopods from the same habitat as the deepest observation of any cephalopod. This makes Magnapinna the first squid known to inhabit the hadal zone.[5][6]

On 9 November 2021, a video of a bigfin squid was captured at a ridge feature off the West Florida Escarpment by an ROV from the NOAAS Okeanos Explorer as part of the Windows to the Deep 2021 expedition.[31][32] The squid was found at a depth of 2,385 m (7,825 ft), and its size is currently being measured using paired lasers.[33]

ROV SuBastian of Schmidt Ocean Institute observed a bigfin squid in close proximity to a black smoker-type hydrothermal vent on 4 April 2023, during the "In Search of Hydrothermal Lost Cities" expedition. The squid was seen at a depth of 1,931 m (6,335 ft).[34][35][36]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Finn, Julian (2016). "Magnapinna Vecchione & Young, 1998". World Register of Marine Species. Flanders Marine Institute. Retrieved 9 March 2018.
  2. ^ "Magnapinna Vecchione & Young 1998 - Encyclopedia of Life". eol.org. Retrieved 24 March 2019.
  3. ^ a b c Vecchione, Michael; Young, Richard E. (29 August 2016). "Magnapinna". Tree of Life Web Project. Retrieved 5 April 2023.
  4. ^ a b c Osterhage, Deborah; MacIntosh, Hugh; Althaus, Franziska; Ross, Andrew (11 November 2020). "Multiple observations of Bigfin Squid (Magnapinna sp.) in the Great Australian Bight reveal distribution patterns, morphological characteristics, and rarely seen behaviour". PLOS ONE. 15 (11): e0241066. Bibcode:2020PLoSO..1541066O. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0241066. PMC 7657483. PMID 33175888.
  5. ^ a b Jamieson, Alan J.; Vecchione, Michael (2 December 2021). "Hadal cephalopods: first squid observation (Oegopsida, Magnapinnidae, Magnapinna sp.) and new records of finned octopods (Cirrata) at depths > 6000 m in the Philippine Trench". Marine Biology. 169 (1): 11. doi:10.1007/s00227-021-03993-x. ISSN 1432-1793. S2CID 244857743.
  6. ^ a b Specktor, Brandon (18 January 2022). "World's deepest-dwelling squid spotted 20,000 feet under the sea". livescience.com. Retrieved 27 June 2023.
  7. ^ Fernández-Álvarez, Fernando Ángel; Taite, Morag; Vecchione, Michael; Villanueva, Roger; Louise, Allcock. "A phylogenomic look into the systematics of oceanic squids". academic.oup.com. doi:10.1093/zoolinnean/zlab069. hdl:10261/267184. Retrieved 8 April 2023.
  8. ^ a b Fischer, H.; Joubin, L. (1906). "Céphalopodes". Expéditions scientifiques du Travailleur et du Talisman (in French). Vol. 7. pp. 313–353. Retrieved 25 June 2023.
  9. ^ Hardy, Alister Clavering (1956). The Open Sea: Its Natural History. Vol. 1. The World of Plankton. London: Collins. p. 290, fig. 96c. OCLC 2680212.
  10. ^ Vecchione, M.; Young, R. E. (1998). "The Magnapinnidae, a newly discovered family of oceanic squid (Cephalopoda: Oegopsida)". South African Journal of Marine Science. 20 (1): 429–437. doi:10.2989/025776198784126340.
  11. ^ Vecchione, M.; Young, R. E. (2006). "The squid family Magnapinnidae (Mollusca: Cephalopoda) in the Atlantic Ocean, with a description of a new species". Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington. 119 (3): 365–372. doi:10.2988/0006-324X(2006)119[365:TSFMMC]2.0.CO;2. S2CID 85820632. Retrieved 13 February 2023.
  12. ^ a b Hanlon, Roger T.; Allcock, Louise; Vecchione, Michael (2018). Octopus, squid & cuttlefish: the worldwide illustrated guide to cephalopods. Brighton. ISBN 978-1-78240-570-2. OCLC 1064625063.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  13. ^ a b c Vecchione, M.; Young, R. E.; Guerra, A.; Lindsay, D. J.; Clague, D. A.; Bernhard, J. M.; Sager, W. W.; Gonzalez, A. F.; Rocha, F.J.; Segonzac, M. (2001). "Worldwide observations of remarkable deep-sea squids". Science. 294 (5551): 2505–2506. doi:10.1126/science.294.5551.2505. hdl:10261/53756. PMID 11752567.
  14. ^ Giles, Jim (1 February 2006). "Oil-rig staff get into marine biology". Nature. 439 (7079): 899. Bibcode:2006Natur.439..899G. doi:10.1038/439899a. ISSN 1476-4687. PMID 16495957. S2CID 4390859.
  15. ^ Institution, Smithsonian. "Cephalopod video: Magnapinna sp". Smithsonian Institution. Retrieved 25 June 2023.
  16. ^ a b c Young, Lauren J. "Untangling The Long-Armed Mystery Of The Bigfin Squid". Science Friday. Retrieved 25 June 2023.
  17. ^ Ruane, Michael E. (27 December 2001). "Science Going to Great Depths". The Washington Post.
  18. ^ Magazine, Smithsonian. "Get to Know the Scientist Discovering Deep-Sea Squids". www.smithsonianmag.com. Retrieved 25 June 2023.
  19. ^ "'Mystery' squid delights scientists". 21 December 2001. Retrieved 25 June 2023.
  20. ^ a b c d e Guerra, A.; González, A. F.; Rocha, F.; Segonzac, M.; Gracia, J. (2002). "Observations from submersibles of rare long-arm bathypelagic squids". Sarsia: North Atlantic Marine Science. 87 (2): 189–192. doi:10.1080/003648202320205274. S2CID 83981846.
  21. ^ Osterhage, Deborah; MacIntosh, Hugh; Althaus, Franziska; Ross, Andrew (11 November 2020). "Multiple observations of Bigfin Squid (Magnapinna sp.) in the Great Australian Bight reveal distribution patterns, morphological characteristics, and rarely seen behaviour". PLOS ONE. 15 (11): e0241066. Bibcode:2020PLoSO..1541066O. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0241066. PMC 7657483. PMID 33175888.
  22. ^ Bolstad, Kat (6 May 2003). "Deep-Sea Cephalopods: An Introduction and Overview". The Octopus News Magazine Online.
  23. ^ Vecchione, M.; Young, R. E. (8 April 2010) [1998]. Payne, A. I. L.; Lipiński, M. R.; Clarke, M. R.; Roeleveld, M. A. C. (eds.). "The Magnapinnidae, a newly discovered family of oceanic squid (Cephalopoda: Oegopsida)". South African Journal of Marine Science. 20 (1). Cephalopod Biodiversity, Ecology and Evolution: 429–437. doi:10.2989/025776198784126340.
  24. ^ a b c Hearn, Kelly (24 November 2008). . National Geographic. National Geographic Society. Archived from the original on 28 December 2008.
  25. ^ "Bigfin Squid (Magnapinna pacifica)". dimensions.com. NOAA. 21 June 2022. Retrieved 28 October 2022.
  26. ^ Vecchione, M.; Young, R. E.; Guerra, A.; Lindsay, D. J.; Clague, D. A.; Bernhard, J. M.; Sager, W. W.; Gonzalez, A. F.; Rocha, F. J.; Segonzac, M. (21 December 2001). "Worldwide Observations of Remarkable Deep-Sea Squids". Science. 294 (5551): 2505. doi:10.1126/science.294.5551.2505. hdl:10261/53756. ISSN 0036-8075. PMID 11752567.
  27. ^ "'Mystery' squid delights scientists". BBC News. 21 December 2001.
  28. ^ "Encounters with deep-sea creatures | Shell Global". www.shell.com. Retrieved 25 June 2023.
  29. ^ . Archived from the original on 6 April 2017. Retrieved 6 March 2017 – via YouTube.
  30. ^ Guerrero-Kommritz, Jurgen; Cantera, Jaime; Puentes, Vladimir; Leon, Jorge (5 April 2018). "First observations of the bigfin squid Magnapinna sp. in the Colombian Southern Caribbean". Biodiversity Data Journal. 6 (6): e24170. doi:10.3897/BDJ.6.e24170. ISSN 1314-2828. PMC 5948231. PMID 29765263.
  31. ^ Osborne, Hannah (11 November 2021). "'Ghostly' Deep-Sea Bigfin Squid Filmed Almost 8,000 Feet below the Ocean Surface". newsweek.com. Newsweek. Retrieved 12 November 2021.
  32. ^ NOAA Ocean Exploration, Windows to the Deep 2021 (9 November 2021). "Bigfin Squid: Genus Magnapinna". oceanexplorer.noaa.gov. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Retrieved 12 November 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  33. ^ "Bigfin Squid". oceanexplorer.NOAA.gov. NOAA. 15 November 2021. Retrieved 28 October 2022.
  34. ^ "Schmidt Ocean on Twitter: "Bigfin squid (a group of..." Twitter. Retrieved 5 April 2023.
  35. ^ ROV SuBastian Samples More Hydrothermal Vents at Puy Des Folles | SOI Divestream 501, retrieved 5 April 2023
  36. ^ "Massive Bigfin Squid Spotted In Extremely Rare Deep-Sea Sighting". IFLScience. 7 April 2023. Retrieved 7 April 2023.

External links edit

bigfin, squid, confused, with, bigfin, reef, squid, group, rarely, seen, cephalopods, with, distinctive, morphology, they, placed, genus, magnapinna, family, magnapinnidae, although, family, described, only, from, larval, paralarval, juvenile, specimens, numer. Not to be confused with Bigfin reef squid Bigfin squids are a group of rarely seen cephalopods with a distinctive morphology They are placed in the genus Magnapinna and family Magnapinnidae 2 Although the family was described only from larval paralarval and juvenile specimens numerous video observations of much larger squid with similar morphology are assumed to be adult specimens of the same family 3 Bigfin squid A bigfin squid filmed by DSV Alvin possibly an adult Magnapinna sp Scientific classification Domain Eukaryota Kingdom Animalia Phylum Mollusca Class Cephalopoda Order Oegopsida Superfamily Chiroteuthoidea Family MagnapinnidaeVecchione amp Young 1998 Genus MagnapinnaVecchione amp Young 1998 1 Type species Magnapinna pacificaVecchione amp Young 1998 Species Magnapinna atlantica Vecchione amp Young 2006 Magnapinna pacifica Vecchione amp Young 1998 Magnapinna talismani Fischer d amp Joubin 1907 Magnapinna sp B Magnapinna sp C The arms and tentacles of the squid are both extremely long estimated at 4 to 8 m 13 to 26 ft These appendages are held perpendicular to the body creating elbows How the squid feeds is yet to be discovered 4 Magnapinna is thought to be the deepest occurring squid genus with sightings as deep as 6 212 metres 20 381 ft below the surface making it the only squid known to inhabit the hadal zone 5 6 Contents 1 Taxonomy 2 Physical specimens 3 Sightings 3 1 Anatomy 3 2 Feeding behaviour 3 3 Observation timeline 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksTaxonomy editMagnapinna is the sister group to Joubiniteuthis another bizarre little known deep sea squid with an unusual body plan and long arms Both Magnapinna and Joubiniteuthis are monotypic genera within their own families Magnapinnidae and Joubiniteuthidae respectively They are also closely related to the whip lash squid in the families Chiroteuthidae and Mastigoteuthidae 7 Physical specimens editThe first record of this family comes from a specimen Magnapinna talismani caught off the Azores on 10 August 1883 8 Due to the damaged nature of the find little information could be discerned and it was classified as a mastigoteuthid first as Chiroteuthopsis talismani 8 and later as Mastigoteuthis talismani In 1956 a similar squid Magnapinna sp C was caught in the South Atlantic but little was thought of it at the time The specimen was illustrated in Alister Hardy s The Open Sea 1956 where it was identified as Octopodoteuthis sicula 9 nbsp A juvenile Magnapinna talismani the first known species from the family with damaged arms During the 1980s two additional immature specimens were found in the Atlantic Magnapinna sp A and three more were found in the Pacific Magnapinna pacifica Researchers Michael Vecchione and Richard Young were the chief investigators of the finds and eventually linked them to the two previous specimens erecting the family Magnapinnidae in 1998 with Magnapinna pacifica as the type species 10 Of particular interest was the very large fin size up to 90 of the mantle length that was responsible for the animals common name A single specimen of a fifth species Magnapinna sp B was collected in 2006 Magnapinna sp A was described as Magnapinna atlantica in 2006 11 The genus was described from two juveniles and paralarva none of which had developed the characteristic long arm tips However they did all have large fins and were therefore named magna pinna meaning big fin 12 Sightings edit nbsp The bigfin squid possibly M pacifica observed north of Hawai i in 2001 showing the extremely large fins of this specimen 3 13 The presumed adult stage of Magnapinna is known only from video observations from submersibles and ROVs no physical specimens have yet been collected leaving their exact identity unknown These individuals and the collected juvenile specimens share the very large fins and the vermiform arm tips with no suckers but the iconic elongated arm tips are known only from observed individuals Although it has not been directly confirmed whether these squid are the same as the Magnapinna known from specimens it is largely accepted that they are members of Magnapinnidae 3 14 Although observations had been made over a decade earlier adult bigfin squid only became known to science in 2001 when marine biology student Heather Holston sent footage of what she described as an 21 foot long squid to teuthologist Michael Vecchione The footage had been recorded from an ROV in the Gulf of Mexico in January 2000 at the request of Holston s boyfriend Eric Leveton who planned on showing it to her Leveton was a structural engineer aboard the oil drilling ship Millennium Explorer who had happened to look into the ROV operation shack when the squid was observed by operators Although Vecchione initially surmised from Holston s description that the footage might be the first video of a live giant squid Architeuthis dux he realized that the video itself portrayed a completely different squid that had no known identity 15 16 17 18 My reaction was to jump out of my chair and start yelling profanities because I knew it was something really different Michael Vecchione on the first sighting of an adult bigfin squid 16 Further discussions with other cephalopod researchers found no leads on the identity of the squid and it was thus dubbed the mystery squid for a portion of time Analysis by Vecchione et al of previous footage from submersibles found other video records of bigfin squid the earliest from 1988 Around the same time new high quality footage of a bigfin squid was also recorded off Hawaii by the ROV Tiburon In December 2001 Vecchione et al published a paper collating these observations this was also the first paper to identify them as potential members of the Magnapinnidae which had been named by Vecchione from the juvenile specimens a few years earlier 13 16 19 Independent of Vecchione s publication Guerra et al published a paper the following year analyzing some of the early bigfin squid footage and also identified them as potential adult magnapinnids 20 Anatomy edit The specimens in the videos looked very distinct from all previously known squids Uniquely among cephalopods the arms and tentacles were of the same length and looked identical similar to extinct belemnites The appendages were also held perpendicular to the body creating the appearance of strange elbows Most remarkable was the length of the elastic tentacles which has been estimated at up to 15 20 times the mantle length This trait is caused by filament coiling of the tentacles a trait that is rare among similar species 21 Estimates based on video evidence put the total length of the largest specimens at 8 m 25 ft or more with some estimates up to 12 m 40 ft 22 Viewing close ups of the body and head it is apparent that the fins are extremely large being proportionately nearly as big as those of bigfin squid larvae While they do appear similar to the larvae no specimens or samples of the adults have been taken While their exact identity is unknown all of the discovered specimens can be observed to have a brown orange color body translucent fins near white tentacles and dark eyes 4 These species of squids are mainly identifiable by their long thin arms and specific colors The squid also have a very unique brachial crown that sets them aside from the rest of other families that are known 23 Feeding behaviour edit Little is known about the feeding behaviour of these squids Scientists have speculated that the bigfin squid feeds by dragging their arms and tentacles along the seafloor and grabbing edible organisms from the floor 24 Alternatively they may simply use a trapping technique waiting passively for prey such as zooplankton 12 to bump into their arms 24 see Cephalopod intelligence The diet of the bigfin squid is unknown However cephalopods are known to feed on crustaceans jellyfish and even other cephalopods 25 Observation timeline edit The first visual record of an adult bigfin squid was in September 1988 The crew of the submersible Nautile encountered a bigfin squid off the coast of northern Brazil 10 42 91 N 40 53 43 W 10 71517 N 40 89050 W 10 71517 40 89050 Bigfin squid first sighting 1988 at a depth of 4 735 metres 15 535 ft In July 1992 the Nautile again encountered these creatures observing two individuals during a dive off the coast of Ghana at 3 40 N 2 30 W 3 667 N 2 500 W 3 667 2 500 Bigfin squid sighting 1992 first at 3 010 metres 9 880 ft depth and then again at 2 950 metres 9 680 ft Both were filmed and photographed 20 In November 1998 the Japanese crewed submersible Shinkai 6500 filmed another bigfin squid in the Indian Ocean south of Mauritius at 32 45 S 57 13 E 32 750 S 57 217 E 32 750 57 217 Bigfin squid sighting 1998 and 2 340 metres 7 680 ft 26 Eric Leveton s video which was later shared with Vecchione was taken from the remotely operated underwater vehicle ROV of the oil drilling ship Millennium Explorer in January 2000 at Mississippi Canyon in the Gulf of Mexico 28 37 N 88 00 W 28 617 N 88 000 W 28 617 88 000 Bigfin squid sighting 2000 Millennium Explorer at 2 195 metres 7 201 ft and allowed for a size estimate By comparison with the visible parts of the ROV the squid was estimated to measure 7 metres 23 ft with arms fully extended 20 The Nautile filmed another Indian Ocean specimen at 19 32 S 65 52 E 19 533 S 65 867 E 19 533 65 867 Bigfin squid sighting 2000 Atalante and 2 576 metres 8 451 ft in the area of Rodrigues Island in May 2000 20 In October 2000 the crewed submersible Alvin found another bigfin squid at 1 940 metres 6 360 ft in Atwater Valley d Gulf of Mexico 27 34 714 N 88 30 59 W 27 578567 N 88 50983 W 27 578567 88 50983 Bigfin squid sighting 2000 Alvin These videos did not receive any media attention most were brief and fairly blurry In May 2001 approximately ten minutes of crisp footage of a bigfin squid were acquired by ROV Tiburon causing a flurry of attention when released 27 These were taken in the Pacific Ocean north of Oʻahu Hawaii 21 54 N 158 12 W 21 900 N 158 200 W 21 900 158 200 Bigfin squid sighting 2001 at 3 380 metres 11 090 ft This video and the pre 2001 videos which had not previously received much scientific attention were documented by Vecchione et al in a paper that year and some of the earlier footage was further analyzed by Guerra et al 2002 13 20 On 11 November 2007 a bigfin squid was filmed off Perdido a drilling site owned by Shell Oil Company located 200 statute miles or 320 km off Houston Texas in the Gulf of Mexico The ROV that filmed the squid had originally been sent to retrieve drilling equipment from the seabed and encountered the squid floating near a well After being circulated within the oil industry the footage was shared with National Geographic News to have its identity determined and was released to the public in 2008 This video received significant online attention in the years since its filming 24 28 29 nbsp A bigfin squid filmed by Okeanos Explorer in 2021 Observations of bigfin squid were made in the Great Australian Bight during towed camera and remote operated vehicle surveys in 2015 and 2017 respectively 4 In 2018 the first observations of a bigfin squid were made from the Southern Caribbean off the coast of Colombia 30 In March 2021 during the expedition to document the wreck of the USS Johnston the submersible DSV Limiting Factor recorded footage of a juvenile bigfin squid from the Philippine Trench at a depth of 6 212 metres 20 381 ft This is the deepest observation of any squid and rivalled only by some unidentified cirrate octopods from the same habitat as the deepest observation of any cephalopod This makes Magnapinna the first squid known to inhabit the hadal zone 5 6 On 9 November 2021 a video of a bigfin squid was captured at a ridge feature off the West Florida Escarpment by an ROV from the NOAAS Okeanos Explorer as part of the Windows to the Deep 2021 expedition 31 32 The squid was found at a depth of 2 385 m 7 825 ft and its size is currently being measured using paired lasers 33 ROV SuBastian of Schmidt Ocean Institute observed a bigfin squid in close proximity to a black smoker type hydrothermal vent on 4 April 2023 during the In Search of Hydrothermal Lost Cities expedition The squid was seen at a depth of 1 931 m 6 335 ft 34 35 36 See also editCephalopod Cephalopod size Deep sea creatureReferences edit Finn Julian 2016 Magnapinna Vecchione amp Young 1998 World Register of Marine Species Flanders Marine Institute Retrieved 9 March 2018 Magnapinna Vecchione amp Young 1998 Encyclopedia of Life eol org Retrieved 24 March 2019 a b c Vecchione Michael Young Richard E 29 August 2016 Magnapinna Tree of Life Web Project Retrieved 5 April 2023 a b c Osterhage Deborah MacIntosh Hugh Althaus Franziska Ross Andrew 11 November 2020 Multiple observations of Bigfin Squid Magnapinna sp in the Great Australian Bight reveal distribution patterns morphological characteristics and rarely seen behaviour PLOS ONE 15 11 e0241066 Bibcode 2020PLoSO 1541066O doi 10 1371 journal pone 0241066 PMC 7657483 PMID 33175888 a b Jamieson Alan J Vecchione Michael 2 December 2021 Hadal cephalopods first squid observation Oegopsida Magnapinnidae Magnapinna sp and new records of finned octopods Cirrata at depths gt 6000 m in the Philippine Trench Marine Biology 169 1 11 doi 10 1007 s00227 021 03993 x ISSN 1432 1793 S2CID 244857743 a b Specktor Brandon 18 January 2022 World s deepest dwelling squid spotted 20 000 feet under the sea livescience com Retrieved 27 June 2023 Fernandez Alvarez Fernando Angel Taite Morag Vecchione Michael Villanueva Roger Louise Allcock A phylogenomic look into the systematics of oceanic squids academic oup com doi 10 1093 zoolinnean zlab069 hdl 10261 267184 Retrieved 8 April 2023 a b Fischer H Joubin L 1906 Cephalopodes Expeditions scientifiques du Travailleur et du Talisman in French Vol 7 pp 313 353 Retrieved 25 June 2023 Hardy Alister Clavering 1956 The Open Sea Its Natural History Vol 1 The World of Plankton London Collins p 290 fig 96c OCLC 2680212 Vecchione M Young R E 1998 The Magnapinnidae a newly discovered family of oceanic squid Cephalopoda Oegopsida South African Journal of Marine Science 20 1 429 437 doi 10 2989 025776198784126340 Vecchione M Young R E 2006 The squid family Magnapinnidae Mollusca Cephalopoda in the Atlantic Ocean with a description of a new species Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington 119 3 365 372 doi 10 2988 0006 324X 2006 119 365 TSFMMC 2 0 CO 2 S2CID 85820632 Retrieved 13 February 2023 a b Hanlon Roger T Allcock Louise Vecchione Michael 2018 Octopus squid amp cuttlefish the worldwide illustrated guide to cephalopods Brighton ISBN 978 1 78240 570 2 OCLC 1064625063 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b c Vecchione M Young R E Guerra A Lindsay D J Clague D A Bernhard J M Sager W W Gonzalez A F Rocha F J Segonzac M 2001 Worldwide observations of remarkable deep sea squids Science 294 5551 2505 2506 doi 10 1126 science 294 5551 2505 hdl 10261 53756 PMID 11752567 Giles Jim 1 February 2006 Oil rig staff get into marine biology Nature 439 7079 899 Bibcode 2006Natur 439 899G doi 10 1038 439899a ISSN 1476 4687 PMID 16495957 S2CID 4390859 Institution Smithsonian Cephalopod video Magnapinna sp Smithsonian Institution Retrieved 25 June 2023 a b c Young Lauren J Untangling The Long Armed Mystery Of The Bigfin Squid Science Friday Retrieved 25 June 2023 Ruane Michael E 27 December 2001 Science Going to Great Depths The Washington Post Magazine Smithsonian Get to Know the Scientist Discovering Deep Sea Squids www smithsonianmag com Retrieved 25 June 2023 Mystery squid delights scientists 21 December 2001 Retrieved 25 June 2023 a b c d e Guerra A Gonzalez A F Rocha F Segonzac M Gracia J 2002 Observations from submersibles of rare long arm bathypelagic squids Sarsia North Atlantic Marine Science 87 2 189 192 doi 10 1080 003648202320205274 S2CID 83981846 Osterhage Deborah MacIntosh Hugh Althaus Franziska Ross Andrew 11 November 2020 Multiple observations of Bigfin Squid Magnapinna sp in the Great Australian Bight reveal distribution patterns morphological characteristics and rarely seen behaviour PLOS ONE 15 11 e0241066 Bibcode 2020PLoSO 1541066O doi 10 1371 journal pone 0241066 PMC 7657483 PMID 33175888 Bolstad Kat 6 May 2003 Deep Sea Cephalopods An Introduction and Overview The Octopus News Magazine Online Vecchione M Young R E 8 April 2010 1998 Payne A I L Lipinski M R Clarke M R Roeleveld M A C eds The Magnapinnidae a newly discovered family of oceanic squid Cephalopoda Oegopsida South African Journal of Marine Science 20 1 Cephalopod Biodiversity Ecology and Evolution 429 437 doi 10 2989 025776198784126340 a b c Hearn Kelly 24 November 2008 Alien like Squid With Elbows Filmed at Drilling Site National Geographic National Geographic Society Archived from the original on 28 December 2008 Bigfin Squid Magnapinna pacifica dimensions com NOAA 21 June 2022 Retrieved 28 October 2022 Vecchione M Young R E Guerra A Lindsay D J Clague D A Bernhard J M Sager W W Gonzalez A F Rocha F J Segonzac M 21 December 2001 Worldwide Observations of Remarkable Deep Sea Squids Science 294 5551 2505 doi 10 1126 science 294 5551 2505 hdl 10261 53756 ISSN 0036 8075 PMID 11752567 Mystery squid delights scientists BBC News 21 December 2001 Encounters with deep sea creatures Shell Global www shell com Retrieved 25 June 2023 Shell Perdido Oil Rig Camera Captures Strange Deep Sea Creature Archived from the original on 6 April 2017 Retrieved 6 March 2017 via YouTube Guerrero Kommritz Jurgen Cantera Jaime Puentes Vladimir Leon Jorge 5 April 2018 First observations of the bigfin squid Magnapinna sp in the Colombian Southern Caribbean Biodiversity Data Journal 6 6 e24170 doi 10 3897 BDJ 6 e24170 ISSN 1314 2828 PMC 5948231 PMID 29765263 Osborne Hannah 11 November 2021 Ghostly Deep Sea Bigfin Squid Filmed Almost 8 000 Feet below the Ocean Surface newsweek com Newsweek Retrieved 12 November 2021 NOAA Ocean Exploration Windows to the Deep 2021 9 November 2021 Bigfin Squid Genus Magnapinna oceanexplorer noaa gov National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved 12 November 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Bigfin Squid oceanexplorer NOAA gov NOAA 15 November 2021 Retrieved 28 October 2022 Schmidt Ocean on Twitter Bigfin squid a group of Twitter Retrieved 5 April 2023 ROV SuBastian Samples More Hydrothermal Vents at Puy Des Folles SOI Divestream 501 retrieved 5 April 2023 Massive Bigfin Squid Spotted In Extremely Rare Deep Sea Sighting IFLScience 7 April 2023 Retrieved 7 April 2023 External links edit nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Magnapinnidae nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Magnapinna CephBase Magnapinna Tree of Life Web Project Magnapinna Cephalopods in Action Long armed squid videos Archived 18 June 2010 at the Wayback Machine August 2022 Bigfin Squid sighting Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bigfin squid amp oldid 1221920238, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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