The Tide Pool: Slow Colossal Squid?, Lantern Shark’s Light Switch, Longer is Faster (in Sperm)

An occasional series where I briefly report 3 new studies and tell you why they are cool!

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Oxygen consumption rates for various squids as a property of mass.

How could not think of the colossal squid as a voracious hunter of the deep?? Contrary to popular opinion Rosa and Seibel argue that

… the colossal squid is not a voracious predator capable of high-speed predator–prey interactions. It is, rather, an ambush or sit-and-float predator that uses the hooks on its arms and tentacles to ensnare prey that unwittingly approach.

You know, you can throw whatever fancy schmancy energetics models you want at it, call it a wuss and sit back in the comfort of your armchair ivory tower talkin’ all you want. But lets be honest do you really want to be in the water WITH RAZOR SHARP TENTACLE HOOKS AND 4 cm RAZOR SHARP BEAKS!!1?1!1!? A slow creature does not a wuss make. Mara Grunbaum agrees.

Why is this study cool? Its a freaking Colossal Squid!

Rosa R, Seibel BA (2010) Slow Pace of Life of the Antarctic Colossal Squid. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the UK In press doi:10.1017/S0025315409991494

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(c) Photophore-containing skin patch before hormonal stimulation (i) and at luminescence peak (ii). The same spiny dermal denticle (white arrow) and group of photophores (white box) are represented in both panels. Scale bar, 1 mm. (d) Ventral luminous pattern of an adult E. spinax specimen. Scale bar, 2 cm.

The Velvet Belly Lantern Shark (Etmopterus spinax) is an exception to rule of bioluminescence in fish. Instead of harnessing bioluminescent bacteria or using a system of photophores and shutters, lantern sharks use photogenic cells on their underbelly (see ‘d’ on the image to the left) under hormonal control. Light emission is triggered by prolactin and melatonin, but it is postulated that the hormones act as a mechanical trigger, like an iris, instead of a chemical one because of a close affinity between the lantern shark’s photocytes and other elasmobranch’s melanophores, a pigmented cell that controls color changes.

Claes and Mallefet applied the hormones Prolactin and Melatonin to the skin of lantern sharks. They found that both hormones stimulated the luminescence (see c-i and c-ii to the left), but melatonin had a longer-lasting, more intense effect and resulted in a greater transparency index.

Why is this study cool? This is the first instance of bioluminescence under hormonal control and may have been an evolutionary carryover from shallow-water crypsis.

Claes JM, Mallefet J (2010) The lantern shark’s light switch: turning shallow water crypsis into midwater camouflage. Biology Letters. In Press doi:10.1098/rsbl.2010.0167

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Sperm. Males produced gazillions of these flagellated little wonders. They race to the egg and the first one in gets the honor passing its copy of genetic information on to a potential offspring.

Sea urchins have been used as a model organism to study reproduction for a while now (about the only thing an echinoderm is good for ;p). As Fitzpatrick and colleagues state:

Selection imposed through sperm competition is commonly thought to promote the evolution of longer sperm, since sperm length is assumed to be positively associated with sperm swimming velocity. Yet, the basis for this assumption remains controversial, and there is surprisingly little intraspecific evidence demonstrating such a link between sperm form and function.

Why is this study cool? As it turns out variation in sperm length was greater within a single ejaculate of a single individual than among males of the urchin Heliocidaris erythrogramma. Evolution for the fastest swimming sperm may select for longer sperm.

Fitzpatrick JL, Garcia-Gonzalez F, Evans JP (2010) Linking sperm length and velocity: the importance of intramale variation. Biology Letters. In Press doi:10.1098/rsbl.2010.0231

5 Replies to “The Tide Pool: Slow Colossal Squid?, Lantern Shark’s Light Switch, Longer is Faster (in Sperm)”

  1. How can anyone doubt that the giant squid isn’t king of the deep? This goes back to moby dick and captain Ahab or 20,000 leagues under the sea. This is something that has been preached as long as I can remember. I have see squid beaks on display at the supermarket and I don’t think their anything to be plaied with, kinda skeeves me out.

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