Cephalopod attack explained

Cephalopod attacks on humans have been reported since ancient times. A significant portion of these attacks are questionable or unverifiable tabloid stories. Cephalopods are members of the class Cephalopoda, which includes all squid, octopuses, cuttlefish, and nautiluses. Some members of the group are capable of causing injury or death to humans.

Defenses

Tentacles

See main article: Cephalopod limb. Tentacles are the major limbs used by squid for defense and hunting. They are often confused with arms—octopi have eight arms, while squid and cuttlefish have eight arms and two tentacles. These tentacles are generally longer than arms and typically have suckers only on their ends instead of along the entire length. The giant squid and colossal squid have some of the largest tentacles in the world, with suckers capable of producing suction forces of more than 800kPa). Giant squids possess a serrated edge to their suckers, while colossal squid have developed it further into tentacle hooks; these hooks have been compared in size to the claws of a tiger.

Beak

See main article: Cephalopod beak. The cephalopod beak resembles that of a parrot. It is a tough structure made of chitin and marks the beginning of the cephalopod's digestive system. Colossal squid use their beaks for shearing and slicing their prey's flesh to allow the pieces to travel the narrow esophagus.

One of the largest beaks ever recorded was on a 495kg (1,091lb) colossal squid. The beak had a lower rostral length of 42.5frac=16NaNfrac=16. Many beaks have also been discovered in the stomachs of sperm whales, as the stomach juices dissolve the soft flesh of the squid, leaving the hard beaks behind. The largest beak ever discovered in this way had a lower rostral length of 49frac=16NaNfrac=16, indicating that the original squid was 600to.[1]

Venom

All octopuses have venom, but few are fatally dangerous. The greater blue-ringed octopus, however, is considered to be one of the most venomous animals known; the venom of one is enough to kill ten adult humans. It uses the neurotoxin tetrodotoxin, which quickly causes respiratory arrest. Estimates of the number of recorded fatalities caused by blue-ringed octopuses vary, ranging from seven to sixteen deaths; most scholars agree that there have been at least eleven.

Attacks on humans

Octopus, including common and giant pacific octopus

While octopuses generally avoid humans, attacks have occasionally been verified. For example, a 8feet Pacific octopus, said to be nearly perfectly camouflaged, approached a diver and attempted to wrap itself around the diver and his camera. Another diver recorded the encounter on video. The divers speculated that the octopus may have thought its reflection in the camera lens was a smaller octopus, which may have motivated it to attack.[6] [7]

The supposed attack on a Staten Island ferry in New York, leading to the loss of the ferry and commemorated by a bronze sculpture (installed in 2016), never actually occurred, nor was there any such ferry disaster. The artist responsible admitted it was "a multimedia art project and social experience – not maliciously – about how gullible people are".[8]

In the 1960s, divers would willingly grapple octopuses in octopus wrestling, a then-popular sport in coastal United States.

Giant or colossal squid

Humboldt squid

See also

Bibliography

Other

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Beak of the Colossal Squid . Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongawera . 17 April 2011 .
  2. Web site: Elsö Osztály: Lábasfejűek Vagy Polipok (Cephalopoda). mek.oszk.hu. hu.
  3. Book: O'Brien, Frederick. Frederick O'Brien

    . Frederick O'Brien. A haldokló szigetvilág. Dante Kiadás. Budapest. 1930s. hu.

  4. Web site: The Project Gutenberg eBook of Toilers of the Sea, by Victor Hugo.
  5. Web site: Hugo in Sark: Notes from a small(er) island.
  6. Web site: Landau . Joel . SEE IT: California scuba divers interact with octopus who tries to take camera . nydailynews.com . 2014-02-17 . 2022-02-17.
  7. Web site: Boisvert . Justin . Giant Octopus Attacks Diver's Camera, Caught on Video . The Escapist . 2014-02-20 . 2022-02-17.
  8. News: Associated Press in New York. New York monument honors victims of giant octopus attack that never occurred. The Guardian. 1 October 2016.
  9. Terror in Paradise. River Monsters. Jeremy. Wade. Jeremy Wade. 8. 5. DailyMotion.
  10. Book: Fraser, Edward. Famous Fighters of the Fleet. Macmillan. New York. 1904. 164.
  11. Web site: Attack of the giant squid! (1874). 4 August 2010.
  12. Book: Bright, Michael. There are Giants in the Sea. 1989. London. Robson Books. 0860514811.
  13. Book: Hendrickson, Robert. The Ocean Almanac. 1992. London. Hutchinson Reference. 0091773555.
  14. [Bernard Heuvelmans]
  15. Roland Hanewald, Das Tropenbuch. Jens Peters Publ., Berlin 1987,, S. 188.
  16. Web site: SS Britannia - 1 November 1941. www.ssbritannia.org.
  17. Wolf H. Berger, Ocean: Reflections on a Century of Exploration
  18. Michael Bright, Man-Eaters: Horrifying True Stories of Savage, Flesh-Eating Predators... and their Human Prey!, 2013, St. Martin's Publishing Group, 9781466859692
  19. [Bernard Heuvelmans]
  20. Mysterious World, episode "Monsters of the Deep", 1978. Video link.
  21. Jonathan Dyer, Big stories about big squids: The story of the Britannia and the birth of a wartime urban legend, May 2020, War in History 28(3)
  22. June 1989 . Robert Erwin Johnson. <italic>Guardians of the Sea: History of the United States Coast Guard, 1915 to the Present</italic>. Annapolis, Md.: Naval Institute Press. 1987. Pp. x, 412. $23.95 . The American Historical Review . 10.1086/ahr/94.3.892 . 1937-5239.
  23. Web site: A legendák és a valóság tengeri szörnyei .
  24. News: Giant squid 'attacks French boat'. 12 January 2012. BBC. 15 January 2003.
  25. Web site: Cassell . Scott . Squidly – In Search of the Red Demon . 17 April 2011 .
  26. News: Associated Press. Jumbo squid invade San Diego shores, spook divers. limited. The Christian Science Monitor. 17 July 2009.
  27. News: Zimmermann. Tim. Behold the Humboldt Squid – It's Hard Out Here for A Shrimp. Outside Online. July 2006. https://web.archive.org/web/20080315034221/https://outside.away.com/outside/features/200607/sea-of-cortez-humboldt-squid-1.html. 15 March 2008.
  28. Web site: River Monsters: Monster Sized Special. Pink Ink. 2 August 2017. 27 May 2016.
  29. Squid. Swimming with Monsters. Backshall. Steve. Steve Backshall. 1. 4. hu. YouTube.