Magnapinna pacifica explained

Magnapinna pacifica is a species of bigfin squid known only from three immature specimens; two caught at a depth of less than 300m (1,000feet) and one from a fish stomach. M. pacifica is the type species of the genus Magnapinna. It is characterised primarily by its proximal tentacles, which are wider than adjacent arms and bear numerous suckers.

M. pacifica was described in 1998 by Michael Vecchione and Richard E. Young based on three specimens. The holotype is a juvenile specimen of 51mm mantle length (ML), taken off the Californian coast at a depth of in a Bongo plankton net. The paratype (USNM 885787), a juvenile specimen of 49mm ML, was found in the stomach of a lancetfish (Alepisaurus ferox). It had initially dried out and was later reconstituted. The third individual, a 19.1mm ML paralarva, was taken off Hawaii at a depth of in a 4m2 plankton net.

A 2001 observation of an adult long-arm squid off Hawaii by the ROV Tiburon has been assigned to M. pacifica by Vecchione and Young.[1]

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: Vecchione . Michael . Young . Richard E. . 29 August 2016 . Magnapinna . 5 April 2023 . Tree of Life Web Project.