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Elusive 'octopus squid' with world's largest biological lights attacks camera in striking new video
By Elise Poore,
2024-05-30
One of the world's most elusive squid species put on a blinding bioluminescent display as it attacked an underwater camera in the deep sea, exceptionally rare new footage reveals.
Squid species within the Octopoteuthidae family have eight arms which is why they are called octopus squid . As juveniles they have two long, trailing tentacles in addition to their arms, but these are lost as the squid matures.
Members of this species are known for their colossal size. The longest individual ever reported was a 7.5-foot-long (2.3 m) female, according to a 2003 study . The individual in the new video is around 2.5 feet (75 centimeters) long, according to a statement from UWA.
In the footage, the squid suddenly appears from the darkness and darts toward the camera, engulfing it with its arms before making a quick getaway. Moments before latching onto the camera, the squid shows off a pair of bright, light-emitting organs, known as photophores, at the tips of two of its arms.
This species' photophores — which emit bursts of light as a result of a chemical reaction — are the largest of their kind in the animal kingdom, researchers wrote in the statement. But scientists have rarely seen the squids' biological lights used in action.
"As we were reviewing the footage, we realized we had captured something very rare," Heather Stewart , a marine geologist and affiliate researcher at UWA, said in the statement. "I think we were very lucky to have witnessed this."
Researchers believe the squids' photophores help them stun prey in the dark waters of the deep sea and possibly communicate with other individuals of the same species. These squid can change the pattern of flashes by controlling the eyelid-like membranes that cover their light-producing organs, according to a 2017 study .
Taningia danae have the largest photophore organs in the animal kingdom. (Image credit: UWA/Inkfish)
In the video, the squid "descended on our camera assuming it was prey, and tried to startle it with its huge bioluminescent headlights," Stewart said.
Overall, researchers know very little about this species' behavior because T. danae are rarely seen alive.
"Many records of this species are from strandings, accidental bycatch or from the stomach contents of whales," Alan Jamieson , director of UWA's Deep Sea Research Centre, said in the statement.
T. danae were only spotted alive for the first time around 19 years ago, by researchers using a similar camera system, according to a study published in 2007 . And these squid have been seen alive only a handful of times since.
"The rarity of live observations of these amazing animals makes every encounter valuable in gathering information on geographic locations, depth, and behavior," Jamieson said in the statement.
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