Facts About Giant Squid
Recently, in 2006, the scientists of the National Science Museum, Japan, caught a female giant squid that was seven meters long. Read on to know the facts about giant squid.
Giant Squid Quick Facts
The scientific name of giant squid is "Architeuthis dux". The giant squid is found in the Northern Atlantic Ocean, Gulf of Mexico, Northern Pacific ocean, Sea of Japan, Bering Sea and in the Southern Ocean. Its presence is also found in Hawaii and California.
Giant squid is the largest invertebrate on Earth. The length of a giant squid is 60 feet long. It weighs around 900 kg.
The eyes of a giant squid are almost the size of basketballs. They share this feature with their cousin, the colossal squid. An eye of a giant squid measures around 25 centimeters in diameter. The giant squid's big eyes help it to search for food, in the deepest part of the ocean.
The giant squid, like the members of the other squid species, have four pairs of arms and a pair of tentacles. These organs help the giant squid to hunt for food. Its mouth is like the beak of a parrot.
A giant squid nourishes on small fish, shrimp and smaller species of squids. Some marine biologists opine, that the giant squid may be able to eat small whales too.
The giant squid has fins that help it to swim and maneuver its way in the ocean. Sometimes, a giant squid uses its funnel to draw water into the mantle, and also, to force it out of its mantle. This process is known as propulsion. This system helps in the movement of the giant squid.
The habitat of the giant squid is in the "epipelagic" and "mesopelagic" zones (deepest zones) of the ocean. A group of giant squids is known as a school.
Giant Squid Interesting Facts
The life expectancy of a giant squid is very short. They live for a maximum of three years. They die after spawning. A giant squid grows very fast.
Another interesting fact, is that the female giant squid, is larger in size than the male squid.
The male giant squid's reproductive system matures fully, even if it is small in size. At the time of mating, the male injects the sperms into the ventral arms of the female giant squid. The female squid stores the sperm, until spawning.
The largest specimen of the giant squid was found in New Zealand in the year 1880.
Marine biologists believe that giant squids have only one natural enemy - the sperm whale.
Many of the facts about the giant squid still remain a mystery to the scientists. The habitat of the giant squid makes it almost impossible for the scientists to study them. The facts that were revealed are the ones which scientists put forward, after researching on the carcasses washed up on the beaches. It was only in 2004 that a photo of a live giant squid was clicked by scientists who were researching in Japan.
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