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Super squid surfaces in Antarctic
BBC News ^
| today
| Kim Griggs
Posted on 04/02/2003 4:14:29 PM PST by Rodney King
A colossal squid has been caught in Antarctic waters, the first example of Mesonychoteuthis hamiltoni retrieved virtually intact from the surface of the ocean.
"All we knew prior to this specimen coming through was that this animal lived in the abyssal environment down in Antarctica," New Zealand squid expert and senior research fellow at Auckland University of Technology, Dr Steve O'Shea, told BBC News Online. "Now we know that it is moving right through the water column, right up to the very surface and it grows to a spectacular size." Mesonychoteuthis hamiltoni was first identified in 1925 after two arms were recovered from a sperm whale's stomach.
There have only ever been six specimens of this squid recovered: five have come from the stomachs of sperm whales and the sixth was caught in a trawl net at a depth of 2,000 to 2,200 metres.
"It's been known since 1925, but no one really paid any attention to it," Dr O'Shea said. "Now we can say that it attains a size larger than the giant squid. Giant squid is no longer the largest squid that's out there. We've got something that's even larger, and not just larger but an order of magnitude meaner."
This squid has one of the largest beaks known of any squid and also has unique swivelling hooks on the clubs at the ends of its tentacles.
This combination allows it to attack fish as large as the Patagonian toothfish and probably to also attempt to maul sperm whales.
"When this animal was alive, it really has to be one of the most frightening predators out there. It's without parallel in the oceans," Dr O'Shea said. The specimen, which was caught in the past few weeks in the Ross Sea, has a mantle length of 2.5 metres. That is a larger mantle than any giant squid that Dr O'Shea has seen and this specimen is still immature, the NZ scientist believes.
"It's only half to two-thirds grown, so it grows up to four metres in mantle length." By comparison, the mantle of the giant squid, Architeuthis dux , is not known to attain more than 2.25 metres.
The squid researchers are calling Mesonychoteuthis hamiltoni the "colossal squid".
"We'd like to give this animal the name colossal squid in order to have a common name for it as opposed to just the scientific name," said Kat Bolstad, research associate at Auckland University of Technology. "We feel that colossal conveys both the size and the aggressiveness of the animal.
"This animal, armed as it is with the hooks and the beak that it has, not only is colossal in size but is going to be a phenomenal predator and something you are not going to want to meet in the water."
TOPICS: Culture/Society; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: antarctica; calamari; cryptozoology; giantsquid; kraken; squid
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To: rdax
21
posted on
04/02/2003 4:29:20 PM PST
by
LayoutGuru2
(In the name of diversity, we are all becoming exactly the same.)
To: Redcloak
Yummy.
22
posted on
04/02/2003 4:31:05 PM PST
by
k2blader
("Mercy, detached from Justice, grows unmerciful." - C. S. Lewis)
To: LayoutGuru2
lol
23
posted on
04/02/2003 4:35:39 PM PST
by
rdax
To: Redcloak
That's a lot of calamommamia!
24
posted on
04/02/2003 4:35:56 PM PST
by
carlo3b
(I believe in our president, GEORGE Washington BUSH)
To: BigBobber
No more normal olives?!? What will I put in my martini?
25
posted on
04/02/2003 4:36:31 PM PST
by
3catsanadog
(When anything goes, everything will.)
To: carlo3b
Is that guy giving it a massage?
26
posted on
04/02/2003 4:38:23 PM PST
by
rdax
To: Rodney King
caught in a trawl net at a depth of 2,000 to 2,200 metres. -- snip --
a phenomenal predator and something you are not going to want to meet in the water."
squid warning! do not swim below 2000 metres!
27
posted on
04/02/2003 4:39:41 PM PST
by
glock rocks
(pray for our men and women in harm's way -- God bless America)
To: Rodney King
My big brother. RIP
To: Servant of the Nine
But how's the taste? Ummm, tastes like chicken.
To: Rodney King
You know what this means, though. It means that the tall tales circulated around 1600-1900 of giant squids roaming the ocean, preying on vessels, were not ficticious. This thing not only ascends to the surface, but it's "an order of magnitude meaner."
-=I=-
30
posted on
04/02/2003 4:44:26 PM PST
by
=Intervention=
(so freaking sick of the lies...)
To: Rodney King
What do those things eat? Besides anything they want.
31
posted on
04/02/2003 4:49:37 PM PST
by
Lady Jag
(Googolplex Star Thinker of the Seventh Galaxy of Light and Ingenuity)
To: Redcloak; dighton; general_re; 2sheep; Jeremiah Jr
To: Thinkin' Gal
With an eye like yours, you could be a great interior decorator...
33
posted on
04/02/2003 4:54:55 PM PST
by
Registered
(If we're not sure he's dead...DROP MORE BOMBS!)
To: Rodney King
Shades of the "Giant Squid" in 20,000 Leagues under the Sea!
34
posted on
04/02/2003 4:56:17 PM PST
by
CatoRenasci
(Ceterum Censeo Mesopotamiam Esse Delendam)
To: Redcloak; xsmommy; Gabz; Bella_Bru
I really wish he would have covered up Hillary's legs before she gets a massage.....
35
posted on
04/02/2003 4:56:26 PM PST
by
Robert A Cook PE
(ABBCNNBCBS (continue to) Lie!)
To: Thinkin' Gal
Screen saver of squid guts.
36
posted on
04/02/2003 4:56:55 PM PST
by
Lady Jag
(Googolplex Star Thinker of the Seventh Galaxy of Light and Ingenuity)
To: Thinkin' Gal
Mama mia, 'atsa some calamari!
37
posted on
04/02/2003 4:57:50 PM PST
by
dighton
(Amen-Corner Hatchet Team, Nasty Little Clique, Vulgar Horde)
To: Thinkin' Gal
,,, just looking at that table the squid is on - cold steel has little appeal.
To: Rodney King
Look at the Sea Monster bump.
To: Rodney King
'Colossal' squid has a powerful beak
great posting,thank you.
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