Friday, January 11, 2013

For the first time ever, a giant squid has been filmed in its natural habitat.

Because they live at such great depths, most of what we know about the giant squid comes from washed-up carcasses. What we know is certainly impressive - the razor toothed suckers on its tentacles, huge beak, basketball-sized eyes and great length - but carcasses can tell us little about topics such as behaviour.


To
get the footage, team leader and zoologist Tsunemi Kubodera and his team used a submersible vessel to get to the squid's habitat. After around 100 descents, in waters about 1000km south of Tokyo, they finally spotted a giant squid and followed it down to depths of 900m (2950 feet). They estimate it was around 3m long (9 ft) and carrying a bait squid in its arms (though it appeared to have lost the two longest tentacles). Quite a size, though it's believed they can reach a staggering 10 metres (32 feet)!

The footage will be broadcast in "Monster Squid: The Giant Is Real," shown on the Discovery Channel on Jan. 27 at 8:00 p.m. EST/PST. A couple of seconds are available on the BBC link.

Photo credit: Discovery Channel.

http://www.livescience.com/26072-giant-squid-first-footage.html

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-20966905
For the first time ever, a giant squid has been filmed in its natural habitat.

Because they live at such great depths, most of what we know about the giant squid comes from washed-up carcasses. What we know is certainly impressive - the razor toothed suckers on its tentacles, huge beak, basketball-sized eyes and great length - but carcasses can tell us little about topics such as behaviour. 

To get the footage, team leader and zoologist Tsunemi Kubodera and his team used a submersible vessel to get to the squid's habitat. After around 100 descents, in waters about 1000km south of Tokyo, they finally spotted a giant squid and followed it down to depths of 900m (2950 feet). They estimate it was around 3m long (9 ft) and carrying a bait squid in its arms (though it appeared to have lost the two longest tentacles). Quite a size, though it's believed they can reach a staggering 10 metres (32 feet)!

The footage will be broadcast in "Monster Squid: The Giant Is Real," shown on the Discovery Channel on Jan. 27 at 8:00 p.m. EST/PST. A couple of seconds are available on the BBC link.

Photo credit: Discovery Channel.

http://www.livescience.com/26072-giant-squid-first-footage.html

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-20966905

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