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Argonaut (animal)

The argonauts (genus Argonauta, the only extant genus in the family Argonautidae) are a group of pelagic octopuses. They are also called paper nautili, referring to the paper-thin eggcase that females secrete. This structure lacks the gas-filled chambers present in chambered nautilus shells and is not a true cephalopod shell, but rather an evolutionary innovation unique to the genus.[1] It is used as a brood chamber, and to trap surface air to maintain buoyancy. It was once speculated that argonauts did not manufacture their eggcases but utilized shells abandoned by other organisms, in the manner of hermit crabs. Experiments by pioneering marine biologist Jeanne Villepreux-Power in the early 19th century disproved this hypothesis, as Villepreux-Power successfully reared argonaut young and observed their shells' development.[2]

Argonauts
Temporal range: Miocene – Recent
Female Argonauta argo with its eggs bulging out of its damaged shell
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Mollusca
Class: Cephalopoda
Order: Octopoda
Family: Argonautidae
Genus: Argonauta
Linnaeus, 1758
Type species
Argonauta argo
Linnaeus, 1758
Species

*Species status questionable.

Synonyms

Argonauts are found in tropical and subtropical waters worldwide. They live in the open ocean, i.e. they are pelagic. Like most octopuses, they have a rounded body, eight limbs (arms) and no fins. However, unlike most octopuses, argonauts live close to the surface rather than on the seabed. Argonauta species are characterised by very large eyes and small webs between the arms. The funnel–mantle locking apparatus is a major diagnostic feature of this taxon. It consists of knob-like cartilages in the mantle and corresponding depressions in the funnel. Unlike the closely allied genera Ocythoe and Tremoctopus, Argonauta species lack water pores.

Of its names, "argonaut" means "sailor of the Argo".[3] "Paper nautilus" is derived from the Greek ναυτίλος nautílos, which literally means "sailor", as paper nautili were thought to use two of their arms as sails.[4] This is not the case, as argonauts swim by expelling water through their funnels.[5] The chambered nautilus was later named after the argonaut, but belongs to a different cephalopod order, Nautilida.

Description Edit

Sexual dimorphism and reproduction Edit

Argonauts exhibit extreme sexual dimorphism in size and lifespan. Females grow up to 10 cm and make shells up to 30 cm, while males rarely surpass 2 cm. The males only mate once in their short lifetime, whereas the females are iteroparous, capable of having offspring many times over the course of their lives. In addition, the females have been known since ancient times, while the males were only described in the late 19th century.

The males lack the dorsal tentacles used by the females to create their eggcases. The males use a modified arm, the hectocotylus, to transfer sperm to the female. For fertilization, the arm is inserted into the female's pallial cavity and then becomes detached from the male. The hectocotylus when found in females was originally described as a parasitic worm.[6]

Eggcase Edit

Female argonauts produce a laterally-compressed calcareous eggcase in which they reside. This "shell" has a double keel fringed by two rows of alternating tubercles. The sides are ribbed with the centre either flat or having winged protrusions. The eggcase curiously resembles the shells of extinct ammonites. It is secreted by the tips of the female's two greatly expanded dorsal tentacles (third left arms) before egg laying. After she deposits her eggs in the floating eggcase, the female takes shelter in it, often retaining the male's detached hectocotylus. She is usually found with her head and tentacles protruding from the opening, but she retreats deeper inside if disturbed. These ornate curved white eggcases are occasionally found floating on the sea, sometimes with the female argonaut clinging to it. It is not made of aragonite as most other shells are, but of calcite, with a three-layered structure[7] and a higher proportion of magnesium carbonate (7%) than other cephalopod shells.[8]

The eggcase contains a bubble of air that the animal captures at the surface of the water and uses for buoyancy, similarly to other shelled cephalopods, although it does not have a chambered phragmocone.[7] Once thought to contribute to occasional mass strandings on beaches, the air bubble is under sophisticated control, evident from the behaviour of animals from which air has been removed under experimental diving conditions.[9][10][11]

Most other octopuses lay eggs in caves; Neale Monks and C. Phil Palmer speculate that, before ammonites died out during the Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event, the argonauts may have evolved to use discarded ammonite shells for their egg laying, eventually becoming able to mend the shells and perhaps make their own shells.[12] However, this is uncertain and it is unknown whether this is the result of convergent evolution.

Argonauta argo is the largest species in the genus and also produces the largest eggcase, which may reach a length of 300 mm.[13][14] The smallest species is Argonauta boettgeri, with a maximum recorded size of 67 mm.[13][15]

Beak Edit

 
 
Lower (left) and upper beaks of female Argonauta argo (63 mm ML) in lateral view
  3D red cyan glasses are recommended to view this image correctly.

The beaks of Argonauta species are distinctive, being characterised by a very small rostrum and a fold that runs to the lower edge or near the free corner. The rostrum is "pinched in" at the sides, making it much narrower than in other octopuses, with the exception of the closely allied monotypic genera Ocythoe and Vitreledonella. The jaw angle is curved and indistinct. Beaks have a sharp shoulder, which may or may not have posterior and anterior parts at different slopes. The hood lacks a notch and is very broad, flat, and low. The hood to crest ratio (f/g) is approximately 2–2.4. The lateral wall of the beak has no notch near the wide crest. Argonaut beaks are most similar to those of Ocythoe tuberculata and Vitreledonella richardi, but differ in "leaning back" to a greater degree than the former and having a more curved jaw angle than the latter.[15]

Feeding and defense Edit

Feeding mostly occurs during the day. Argonauts use tentacles to grab prey and drag it toward the mouth. It then bites the prey to inject it with venom from the salivary gland. They feed on small crustaceans, molluscs, jellyfish and salps. If the prey is shelled, the argonaut uses its radula to drill into the organism, then inject the toxin.

Argonauts are capable of altering their color. They can blend in with their surroundings to avoid predators. They also produce ink, which is ejected when the animal is being attacked. This ink paralyzes the olfaction of the attacker, providing time for the argonaut to escape. The female is also able to pull back the web covering of her shell, making a silvery flash, which may deter a predator from attacking.

Argonauts are preyed upon by tunas, billfishes, and dolphins. Shells and remains of argonauts have been recorded from the stomachs of Alepisaurus ferox and Coryphaena hippurus.[15]

Male argonauts have been observed residing inside salps, although little is known about this relationship.[16]

Classification Edit

 
Fossilised eggcase of the extinct Miocene species Argonauta joanneus (lateral and keel views)
 
Eggcases of six extant Argonauta species

The genus Argonauta contains up to seven extant species. Several extinct species are also known.

Four extant species are widely considered valid:[17]

Several additional taxa are either treated as valid species or regarded as nomina dubia:

A number of extinct species have also been described:

The extinct species Obinautilus awaensis was originally assigned to Argonauta, but has since been transferred to the genus Obinautilus.[19]

Dubious or uncertain taxa Edit

The following taxa associated with the family Argonautidae are of uncertain taxonomic status:[20]

Binomial name and author citation Current systematic status Type locality Type repository
Argonauta arctica Fabricius, 1780 Undetermined Unresolved; ?Tullukaurfak, Greenland Unresolved
Argonauta bibula Röding, 1798 Undetermined Unresolved Unresolved
Argonauta compressa Blainville, 1826 Undetermined Mer de Indes Unresolved; [other Blainville types at MNHN] [not reported by Lu et al. (1995)]
Argonauta conradi Parkinson, 1856 Species of uncertain status [fide Robson (1932:200)] "New Nantucket, Pacific Ocean" Unresolved
Argonauta cornu Gmelin, 1791 Undetermined Unresolved Unresolved; LS?
Argonauta cymbium Linné, 1758 Non-cephalopod; foraminiferous shell [fide Von Martens (1867:103)
Argonauta fragilis Parkinson, 1856 Species of uncertain status [fide Robson (1932:200)] Not designated Unresolved
Argonauta geniculata Gould, 1852 Species of uncertain status [fide Robson (1932:200)] Near Sugarloaf Mountain, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Type not extant [fide Johnson (1964:32)]
Argonauta maxima Dall, 1871 Nomen nudum
Argonauta navicula Lightfoot, 1786 Species dubium [fide Rehder (1967:11)] Not designated Unresolved
Argonauta rotunda Perry, 1811 Non-cephalopod; Carcinaria sp. [fide Robson (1932:201)]
Argonauta rufa Owen, 1836 Incertae sedis [fide Robson (1932:181)] "Indian seas" ["South Pacific ocean" fide Owen (1842:114)] Unresolved; Museum of the Royal College of Surgeons? Holotype
Argonauta sulcata Lamarck, 1801 Nomen nudum
Argonauta tuberculata f. aurita Von Martens, 1867 Undetermined Unresolved ZMB
Argonauta tuberculata f. mutica Von Martens, 1867 Undetermined Coast of Brazil ZMB Holotype
Argonauta tuberculata f. obtusangula Von Martens, 1867 Undetermined Not designated ZMB Syntypes
Argonauta vitreus Gmelin, 1791 Undetermined Not designated Unresolved; LS?
Octopus (Ocythoe) raricyathus Blainville, 1826 Undetermined [Argonauta?] Not designated MNHN Holotype; specimen not extant [fide Lu et al. (1995:323)]
Ocythoe punctata Say, 1819 Argonauta sp. [fide Robson (1929d:215)] Atlantic Ocean near the North American coast (from stomach of dolphin) Unresolved; ANSP? Holotype [not traced by Spamer and Bogan (1992)]
Tremoctopus hirondellei Joubin, 1895 Argonauta or Ocythoe [fide Thomas (1977:386)] 44°28′56″N 46°48′15″W / 44.48222°N 46.80417°W / 44.48222; -46.80417 (Atlantic Ocean) MOM Holotype [station 151] [fide Belloc (1950:3)]

In design Edit

The argonaut was the inspiration for a number of classical and modern art and decorative forms including use on pottery and architectural elements. Some early examples are found in Bronze Age Minoan art from Crete.[21] A variation known as the double argonaut design was also found in Minoan jewelry.[22] This design was also transposed and adapted in both gold and glass in contemporary Mycenaean contexts, as seen both at Mycenae and the Tholos at Volo.[23]

In literature and etymology Edit

 
Argonauts surrounding the Nautilus, in Jules Verne's novel Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea

References Edit

  1. ^ Naef, A. (1923). "Die Cephalopoden, Systematik". Fauna Flora Golf. Napoli (35) (in German). 1: 1–863.
  2. ^ Scales, Helen (2015). Spirals in Time: The Secret Life and Curious Afterlife of Seashells. Bloomsbury.
  3. ^ "Word Origin and History for Argonaut". Online Etymology Dictionary. 2010. Retrieved 2017-11-15.
  4. ^ "Origin of nautilus". Dictionary.com Unabridged. 2017. Retrieved 2017-11-15.
  5. ^ Figuier, Louis (1869). The Ocean World: Being a Descriptive History of the Sea and Its Living Inhabitants. London: Cassell, Petter and Galpin. pp. 329.
  6. ^ Delle Chiaje, S. (1825). Memorie sulla storia e notomia degli animali (in Italian). Senza Vertebre del Regno di Napoli. I.
  7. ^ a b Nixon, M.; Young, J. Z. (2003). The Brains and Lives of Cephalopods. Oxford University Press.[page needed]
  8. ^ Saul, L.; Stadum, C. (2005). "Fossil Argonauts (Mollusca: Cephalopoda: Octopodida) From Late Miocene Siltstones Of The Los Angeles Basin, California". Journal of Paleontology. 79 (3): 520–531. doi:10.1666/0022-3360(2005)079<0520:FAMCOF>2.0.CO;2. ISSN 0022-3360. JSTOR 4095022. S2CID 131373540.
  9. ^ Finn, J. K. & Norman, M. D. The argonaut shell: gas-mediated buoyancy control in a pelagic octopus. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, published online May 19, 2010. doi:10.1098/rspb.2010.0155
  10. ^ "Museum Victoria 'Argonaut buoyancy' video" 2012-07-13 at the Wayback Machine museumvictoria.com.au. URL accessed on 19 May 2010.
  11. ^ Pidcock, R. 2010. Ancient octopus mystery resolved. BBC News, May 19, 2010.
  12. ^ Monks, N.; Palmer, C. P. (2002). Ammonites. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington D.C.
  13. ^ a b Pisor, D. L. (2005). Registry of World Record Size Shells (4th ed.). Snail's Pace Productions and ConchBooks. p. 12.
  14. ^ (in Russian) Nesis, K. N. 1982. Abridged key to the cephalopod mollusks of the world's ocean. Light and Food Industry Publishing House, Moscow, 385+ii pp. [Translated into English by B. S. Levitov, ed. by L. A. Burgess (1987), Cephalopods of the world. T. F. H. Publications, Neptune City, NJ, 351 pp.]
  15. ^ a b c Clarke, M. R. (1986). A Handbook for the Identification of Cephalopod Beaks. Oxford University Press. pp. 273 pp.
  16. ^ Banas, P. T.; D. E. Smith & D. C. Biggs (1982). "An association between a pelagic octopod, Argonauta sp. Linnaeus 1758, and aggregate salps". Fish. Bull. 80: 648–650.
  17. ^ Serge Gofas (2015). "Argonauta Linnaeus, 1758". World Register of Marine Species. Flanders Marine Institute. Retrieved 5 February 2018.
  18. ^ Ponzi, G. (1876). Cefalopodi. [p. 932 + pl. III 1a–b] In: I fossili del Monte Vaticano. Atti della Reale Accademia dei Lincei, series 2, 3(2): 925–959 + 3 pls. (in Italian)
  19. ^ Martill, D.M. & M.J. Barker (2006). A paper nautilus (Octopoda, Argonauta) from the Miocene Pakhna Formation of Cyprus. Palaeontology 49 (5): 1035-1041.
  20. ^ Sweeney, M. J. Taxa Associated with the Family Argonautidae Tryon, 1879. Tree of Life web project.
  21. ^ Eleni M. Konstantinidi, 2001, Jewellery Revealed in the Burial Contexts of the Greek Bronze Age, Hadrian Books, 322 pages ISBN 1-84171-165-9
  22. ^ C.Michael Hogan, Knossos Fieldnotes, The Modern Antiquarian (2007)
  23. ^ Higgins, R.H. 1961. Greek and Roman Jewellery, Butler & Tanner Ltd, pg. 79. Available at: https://books.google.com/books?id=vDTduIW0fgEC&q=greek+and+roman+jewellery
  24. ^ Johann David Wyss and Jenny H. Stickney, The Swiss Family Robinson, Ginn & Co., 1898, 364 pages.

External links Edit

  • Tree of Life web project: Argonauta
  • Absurd creature of the week: The beautiful octopus whose sex is all about dismemberment

argonaut, animal, this, article, about, cephalopod, other, uses, argonaut, disambiguation, argonauts, genus, argonauta, only, extant, genus, family, argonautidae, group, pelagic, octopuses, they, also, called, paper, nautili, referring, paper, thin, eggcase, t. This article is about the cephalopod For other uses see Argonaut disambiguation The argonauts genus Argonauta the only extant genus in the family Argonautidae are a group of pelagic octopuses They are also called paper nautili referring to the paper thin eggcase that females secrete This structure lacks the gas filled chambers present in chambered nautilus shells and is not a true cephalopod shell but rather an evolutionary innovation unique to the genus 1 It is used as a brood chamber and to trap surface air to maintain buoyancy It was once speculated that argonauts did not manufacture their eggcases but utilized shells abandoned by other organisms in the manner of hermit crabs Experiments by pioneering marine biologist Jeanne Villepreux Power in the early 19th century disproved this hypothesis as Villepreux Power successfully reared argonaut young and observed their shells development 2 ArgonautsTemporal range Miocene Recent PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg NFemale Argonauta argo with its eggs bulging out of its damaged shellScientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum MolluscaClass CephalopodaOrder OctopodaFamily ArgonautidaeGenus ArgonautaLinnaeus 1758Type speciesArgonauta argoLinnaeus 1758SpeciesArgonauta argo Argonauta boettgeri Argonauta cornutus Argonauta hians Argonauta nodosa Argonauta nouryi Argonauta pacificus Argonauta absyrtus Argonauta biarmata Argonauta itoigawai Argonauta joanneus Argonauta oweri Argonauta sismondai Argonauta tokunagai Species status questionable SynonymsArgonautarius Dumeril 1806 Todarus nom nud Rafinesque 1815 Todarus Rafinesque 1840 Trichocephalus Chiaje 1827 in 1823 1831Argonauts are found in tropical and subtropical waters worldwide They live in the open ocean i e they are pelagic Like most octopuses they have a rounded body eight limbs arms and no fins However unlike most octopuses argonauts live close to the surface rather than on the seabed Argonauta species are characterised by very large eyes and small webs between the arms The funnel mantle locking apparatus is a major diagnostic feature of this taxon It consists of knob like cartilages in the mantle and corresponding depressions in the funnel Unlike the closely allied genera Ocythoe and Tremoctopus Argonauta species lack water pores Of its names argonaut means sailor of the Argo 3 Paper nautilus is derived from the Greek naytilos nautilos which literally means sailor as paper nautili were thought to use two of their arms as sails 4 This is not the case as argonauts swim by expelling water through their funnels 5 The chambered nautilus was later named after the argonaut but belongs to a different cephalopod order Nautilida Contents 1 Description 1 1 Sexual dimorphism and reproduction 1 2 Eggcase 1 3 Beak 2 Feeding and defense 3 Classification 3 1 Dubious or uncertain taxa 4 In design 5 In literature and etymology 6 References 7 External linksDescription EditSexual dimorphism and reproduction Edit Argonauts exhibit extreme sexual dimorphism in size and lifespan Females grow up to 10 cm and make shells up to 30 cm while males rarely surpass 2 cm The males only mate once in their short lifetime whereas the females are iteroparous capable of having offspring many times over the course of their lives In addition the females have been known since ancient times while the males were only described in the late 19th century The males lack the dorsal tentacles used by the females to create their eggcases The males use a modified arm the hectocotylus to transfer sperm to the female For fertilization the arm is inserted into the female s pallial cavity and then becomes detached from the male The hectocotylus when found in females was originally described as a parasitic worm 6 nbsp Mature female A nodosa nbsp Juvenile female A hians nbsp Immature male A hiansEggcase Edit Female argonauts produce a laterally compressed calcareous eggcase in which they reside This shell has a double keel fringed by two rows of alternating tubercles The sides are ribbed with the centre either flat or having winged protrusions The eggcase curiously resembles the shells of extinct ammonites It is secreted by the tips of the female s two greatly expanded dorsal tentacles third left arms before egg laying After she deposits her eggs in the floating eggcase the female takes shelter in it often retaining the male s detached hectocotylus She is usually found with her head and tentacles protruding from the opening but she retreats deeper inside if disturbed These ornate curved white eggcases are occasionally found floating on the sea sometimes with the female argonaut clinging to it It is not made of aragonite as most other shells are but of calcite with a three layered structure 7 and a higher proportion of magnesium carbonate 7 than other cephalopod shells 8 The eggcase contains a bubble of air that the animal captures at the surface of the water and uses for buoyancy similarly to other shelled cephalopods although it does not have a chambered phragmocone 7 Once thought to contribute to occasional mass strandings on beaches the air bubble is under sophisticated control evident from the behaviour of animals from which air has been removed under experimental diving conditions 9 10 11 Most other octopuses lay eggs in caves Neale Monks and C Phil Palmer speculate that before ammonites died out during the Cretaceous Paleogene extinction event the argonauts may have evolved to use discarded ammonite shells for their egg laying eventually becoming able to mend the shells and perhaps make their own shells 12 However this is uncertain and it is unknown whether this is the result of convergent evolution Argonauta argo is the largest species in the genus and also produces the largest eggcase which may reach a length of 300 mm 13 14 The smallest species is Argonauta boettgeri with a maximum recorded size of 67 mm 13 15 nbsp Female A nodosa with its eggcase nbsp The eggcase of A argo nbsp The eggcase of A nodosa nbsp The eggcase of A hiansBeak Edit Further information Cephalopod beak nbsp nbsp Lower left and upper beaks of female Argonauta argo 63 mm ML in lateral view nbsp 3D red cyan glasses are recommended to view this image correctly The beaks of Argonauta species are distinctive being characterised by a very small rostrum and a fold that runs to the lower edge or near the free corner The rostrum is pinched in at the sides making it much narrower than in other octopuses with the exception of the closely allied monotypic genera Ocythoe and Vitreledonella The jaw angle is curved and indistinct Beaks have a sharp shoulder which may or may not have posterior and anterior parts at different slopes The hood lacks a notch and is very broad flat and low The hood to crest ratio f g is approximately 2 2 4 The lateral wall of the beak has no notch near the wide crest Argonaut beaks are most similar to those of Ocythoe tuberculata and Vitreledonella richardi but differ in leaning back to a greater degree than the former and having a more curved jaw angle than the latter 15 Feeding and defense EditFeeding mostly occurs during the day Argonauts use tentacles to grab prey and drag it toward the mouth It then bites the prey to inject it with venom from the salivary gland They feed on small crustaceans molluscs jellyfish and salps If the prey is shelled the argonaut uses its radula to drill into the organism then inject the toxin Argonauts are capable of altering their color They can blend in with their surroundings to avoid predators They also produce ink which is ejected when the animal is being attacked This ink paralyzes the olfaction of the attacker providing time for the argonaut to escape The female is also able to pull back the web covering of her shell making a silvery flash which may deter a predator from attacking Argonauts are preyed upon by tunas billfishes and dolphins Shells and remains of argonauts have been recorded from the stomachs of Alepisaurus ferox and Coryphaena hippurus 15 Male argonauts have been observed residing inside salps although little is known about this relationship 16 Classification Edit nbsp Fossilised eggcase of the extinct Miocene species Argonauta joanneus lateral and keel views nbsp Eggcases of six extant Argonauta speciesThe genus Argonauta contains up to seven extant species Several extinct species are also known Four extant species are widely considered valid 17 Argonauta argo Linnaeus 1758 Argonauta hians Lightfoot 1786 Argonauta nodosus Lightfoot 1786 Argonauta nouryi Lorois 1852Several additional taxa are either treated as valid species or regarded as nomina dubia Argonauta boettgeri Maltzan 1881 Argonauta cornutus Conrad 1854 Argonauta pacificus Dall 1871A number of extinct species have also been described Argonauta absyrtus Martill amp Barker 2006 Argonauta biarmata Ponzi 1876 18 Argonauta itoigawai Tomida 1983 Argonauta joanneus Hilber 1915 Argonauta oweri Fleming 1945 Argonauta sismondai Bellardi 1872 Argonauta tokunagai Yokoyama 1913The extinct species Obinautilus awaensis was originally assigned to Argonauta but has since been transferred to the genus Obinautilus 19 Dubious or uncertain taxa Edit The following taxa associated with the family Argonautidae are of uncertain taxonomic status 20 Binomial name and author citation Current systematic status Type locality Type repositoryArgonauta arctica Fabricius 1780 Undetermined Unresolved Tullukaurfak Greenland UnresolvedArgonauta bibula Roding 1798 Undetermined Unresolved UnresolvedArgonauta compressa Blainville 1826 Undetermined Mer de Indes Unresolved other Blainville types at MNHN not reported by Lu et al 1995 Argonauta conradi Parkinson 1856 Species of uncertain status fide Robson 1932 200 New Nantucket Pacific Ocean UnresolvedArgonauta cornu Gmelin 1791 Undetermined Unresolved Unresolved LS Argonauta cymbium Linne 1758 Non cephalopod foraminiferous shell fide Von Martens 1867 103 Argonauta fragilis Parkinson 1856 Species of uncertain status fide Robson 1932 200 Not designated UnresolvedArgonauta geniculata Gould 1852 Species of uncertain status fide Robson 1932 200 Near Sugarloaf Mountain Rio de Janeiro Brazil Type not extant fide Johnson 1964 32 Argonauta maxima Dall 1871 Nomen nudumArgonauta navicula Lightfoot 1786 Species dubium fide Rehder 1967 11 Not designated UnresolvedArgonauta rotunda Perry 1811 Non cephalopod Carcinaria sp fide Robson 1932 201 Argonauta rufa Owen 1836 Incertae sedis fide Robson 1932 181 Indian seas South Pacific ocean fide Owen 1842 114 Unresolved Museum of the Royal College of Surgeons HolotypeArgonauta sulcata Lamarck 1801 Nomen nudumArgonauta tuberculata f aurita Von Martens 1867 Undetermined Unresolved ZMBArgonauta tuberculata f mutica Von Martens 1867 Undetermined Coast of Brazil ZMB HolotypeArgonauta tuberculata f obtusangula Von Martens 1867 Undetermined Not designated ZMB SyntypesArgonauta vitreus Gmelin 1791 Undetermined Not designated Unresolved LS Octopus Ocythoe raricyathus Blainville 1826 Undetermined Argonauta Not designated MNHN Holotype specimen not extant fide Lu et al 1995 323 Ocythoe punctata Say 1819 Argonauta sp fide Robson 1929d 215 Atlantic Ocean near the North American coast from stomach of dolphin Unresolved ANSP Holotype not traced by Spamer and Bogan 1992 Tremoctopus hirondellei Joubin 1895 Argonauta or Ocythoe fide Thomas 1977 386 44 28 56 N 46 48 15 W 44 48222 N 46 80417 W 44 48222 46 80417 Atlantic Ocean MOM Holotype station 151 fide Belloc 1950 3 In design EditThe argonaut was the inspiration for a number of classical and modern art and decorative forms including use on pottery and architectural elements Some early examples are found in Bronze Age Minoan art from Crete 21 A variation known as the double argonaut design was also found in Minoan jewelry 22 This design was also transposed and adapted in both gold and glass in contemporary Mycenaean contexts as seen both at Mycenae and the Tholos at Volo 23 In literature and etymology Edit nbsp Argonauts surrounding the Nautilus in Jules Verne s novel Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the SeaArgonauts are featured in Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea noted for their ability to use their tentacles as sails though this is a widespread myth A female argonaut is also described in Marianne Moore s poem The Paper Nautilus Argonauta is the name of a chapter in Anne Morrow Lindbergh s Gift from the Sea Paper nautiluses were caught in The Swiss Family Robinson novel 24 Argonauts gave their name to an Arabidopsis thaliana mutation and by extension to Argonaute proteins References Edit Naef A 1923 Die Cephalopoden Systematik Fauna Flora Golf Napoli 35 in German 1 1 863 Scales Helen 2015 Spirals in Time The Secret Life and Curious Afterlife of Seashells Bloomsbury Word Origin and History for Argonaut Online Etymology Dictionary 2010 Retrieved 2017 11 15 Origin of nautilus Dictionary com Unabridged 2017 Retrieved 2017 11 15 Figuier Louis 1869 The Ocean World Being a Descriptive History of the Sea and Its Living Inhabitants London Cassell Petter and Galpin pp 329 Delle Chiaje S 1825 Memorie sulla storia e notomia degli animali in Italian Senza Vertebre del Regno di Napoli I a b Nixon M Young J Z 2003 The Brains and Lives of Cephalopods Oxford University Press page needed Saul L Stadum C 2005 Fossil Argonauts Mollusca Cephalopoda Octopodida From Late Miocene Siltstones Of The Los Angeles Basin California Journal of Paleontology 79 3 520 531 doi 10 1666 0022 3360 2005 079 lt 0520 FAMCOF gt 2 0 CO 2 ISSN 0022 3360 JSTOR 4095022 S2CID 131373540 Finn J K amp Norman M D The argonaut shell gas mediated buoyancy control in a pelagic octopus Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences published online May 19 2010 doi 10 1098 rspb 2010 0155 Museum Victoria Argonaut buoyancy video Archived 2012 07 13 at the Wayback Machine museumvictoria com au URL accessed on 19 May 2010 Pidcock R 2010 Ancient octopus mystery resolved BBC News May 19 2010 Monks N Palmer C P 2002 Ammonites Smithsonian Institution Press Washington D C a b Pisor D L 2005 Registry of World Record Size Shells 4th ed Snail s Pace Productions and ConchBooks p 12 in Russian Nesis K N 1982 Abridged key to the cephalopod mollusks of the world s ocean Light and Food Industry Publishing House Moscow 385 ii pp Translated into English by B S Levitov ed by L A Burgess 1987 Cephalopods of the world T F H Publications Neptune City NJ 351 pp a b c Clarke M R 1986 A Handbook for the Identification of Cephalopod Beaks Oxford University Press pp 273 pp Banas P T D E Smith amp D C Biggs 1982 An association between a pelagic octopod Argonauta sp Linnaeus 1758 and aggregate salps Fish Bull 80 648 650 Serge Gofas 2015 Argonauta Linnaeus 1758 World Register of Marine Species Flanders Marine Institute Retrieved 5 February 2018 Ponzi G 1876 Cefalopodi p 932 pl III 1a b In I fossili del Monte Vaticano Atti della Reale Accademia dei Lincei series 2 3 2 925 959 3 pls in Italian Martill D M amp M J Barker 2006 A paper nautilus Octopoda Argonauta from the Miocene Pakhna Formation of Cyprus Palaeontology 49 5 1035 1041 Sweeney M J Taxa Associated with the Family Argonautidae Tryon 1879 Tree of Life web project Eleni M Konstantinidi 2001 Jewellery Revealed in the Burial Contexts of the Greek Bronze Age Hadrian Books 322 pages ISBN 1 84171 165 9 C Michael Hogan Knossos Fieldnotes The Modern Antiquarian 2007 Higgins R H 1961 Greek and Roman Jewellery Butler amp Tanner Ltd pg 79 Available at https books google com books id vDTduIW0fgEC amp q greek and roman jewellery Johann David Wyss and Jenny H Stickney The Swiss Family Robinson Ginn amp Co 1898 364 pages External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Argonauta Tree of Life web project Argonauta Absurd creature of the week The beautiful octopus whose sex is all about dismemberment Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Argonaut animal amp oldid 1179704184, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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