An enormous squid that grows to 23 feet long and lives more
than 3,000 feet below the surface has been discovered by scientists
in submersible vehicles. They have spotted the squid in the Gulf of
Mexico, the Atlantic, Pacific, and Indian oceans. This is not the
well-known giant squid: “These are a real mystery,” said Michael
Vecchione of the National Museum of Natural History. “This is well
beyond a new species. New species are a dime a dozen. This is fundamentally
different.”
Vecchione said these squid do not act or look like other squid,
which tend to be quick-moving and highly visual. Instead of having
two arms and eight tentacles, this squid has ten appendages that all
look alike. “The really long skinny arms are much longer than the
squid’s body. Whenever the submersible came upon one, it was in a
characteristic posture, floating vertically in the water with the arms
spread out,” he said.
Texas A&M oceanographer William Sager, who photographed
the squid, said, “I had never seen anything like this. It just hung
there, looking at us, as if suddenly seeing our submersible float up
like a whale with lights was no big deal. We photographed it for ten
minutes, and when we got to shore, we went looking for someone
who could identify it.”
Vecchione said the skinny tentacles would not be used to grasp
prey — which is what most squid do with them — but may be used
like a net. “I think those long extensions are really sticky. One animal
bumped into the submersible and got tangled up in it. The
animal seemed to have a problem letting go. It might go around
waiting for small prey like crustaceans to stumble into it and get
stuck — sort of like a living spider web. Every time someone goes
down there they find something really strange. It’s Eureka time.”
— Reuters and Science Magazine