Ommastrephid squids are among the strongest swimmers in the Cephalopoda. Some are commonly known as “flying squid” due to their ability to glide over the ocean surface…
I love that they even spread and flatten ther tentacles out to increase their hang time. Now to go look up more about them.
Caveman73says
Wow! That is so cool. I have never seen them out to sea. I’ve the flying fish but not the flying squid. Where or what ocean would you see them in? BTW I’m active duty Navy.
oh-so-cool.
Check the resemblance between the webbed-tentacle shape and a sphinx moth.
Stephen Wellssays
They can fly. There’s nowhere to hide any more. Well, Arizona, I guess.
Hmmm. Can we give a squid some hydrogen-production genes so as to produce a floating (flammable) tentacled gasbag? Silent and camouflaged in sky-blue, they drift and ripple through the skies, descending to grasp their prey and lift them skywards to feed. The Tentacled Rapture.
—I probably need less coffee.
Larynxsays
There’s clearly a B-movie film right here!
Does anyone know why it can ‘fly’?
I think I speak for many of us when I say “ZOMFFSM!! That squid is fucking gliding!!!1”
Knockgoatssays
Hi, welcome back SC! New machine humming along well?
deviljellysays
Which direction is it “flying in”? right to left? i.e. backwards?
bobxxxxsays
Perhaps these creatures can glide above the water thanks to natural selection. Their ancestors who could stay out of the water the longest didn’t become another animal’s lunch. Or maybe god magically gave them this ability.
SteveMsays
Which direction is it “flying in”? right to left? i.e. backwards?
I assume it is flying to the left since that is the direction its water jet would propel it.
What I want to see is whatever was chasing it that scared it enough to lauch itself out of the water.
Moggiesays
#34:
Wagner’s, Flight of the Valkyries is now running through my head.
Didn’t I see one of these on a T-shirt somewhere recently?
Anybody notice that this flying squid only has 6 arms? And people were complaining that the one on the T-shirt only had 6.
kamakasays
Which direction is it “flying in”? right to left? i.e. backwards?
Look at the water droplets.
Why couldn’t I get a cool toy like that when I was a kid?
LanceR, JSGsays
Now if we can just put frickin’ lasers on their heads!
1. Flying squid
2. Flying squid with frickin’ lasers on their heads.
3. ???
4. WORLD DOMINATION! (and profit!)
LadyHsays
Did this photo get photoshopped? I looks like someone ran it thru the paint daubs filter.
SC, OMsays
Hi, welcome back SC!
Hi! Thanks! (I was so happy to see you’d returned a couple of weeks ago – missed you terribly in some of the political discussions.)
New machine humming along well?
So far! I can’t seem to get the battery to lock in place as I assume it should, but other than that I’m loving it.
Fred the Hunsays
It’s an adolescent Vorlon having a bit of fun!
Vorlons are still insubstantial beings of light; however they appear to be cephalopods equipped with two rows of tentacles. It is disputed if there is any physical substance left in a Vorlon whatsoever and it is also very unlikely that this is the form to which they originally evolved millions of years ago. Whether the change to such powerful beings was a natural one resulting from reaching a certain level of mental or physical advancement or if it was helped along by technological means is unknown.
And to think some Ommastrephids are 7-foot long, have a temper and are invading into Pacific Northwestern coast of the US
Brownian, OMsays
What’s the big deal? My 1.3 average in biology led me to believe all squid fly.
Show me a bird that can run really fast or a reptile that lives in the ocean and maybe then I’ll be impressed.
Happy Tentaclessays
I love the flying squid! And it doesn’t even need quantum wings to do it! Next step – world domination by the Tentacled Overlords…
Tiksays
There are ten legs in the photo. Distribution in the photo appears to be left to right 1a 2a 1a+1t 1a+1t 2a 1a, where a=arm and t=tentacle. Membranes appear to connect the appendages to the two adjacent appendages. Think of a flattened umbrella.
SteveMsays
There are actually 8. Follow the link to the source. (Still, 8 and not 10.)
Yes, I did before, 6 arms and the 2 tentacles are fused together so I didn’t know if they still count as 2 or one, or even if they still work as a tentacle. So is this actually a heptapus?
I see no reason to think that it doesn’t have 8 arms + 2 tentacles like all the other decapodiform cephalopods do.
Sven, click on the photo to see that it is not a decapod.
Brownian, OMsays
Is there anything cephalopods won’t do?
Sort my whites and colours, apparently.
Look at this. My favourite shirt, ruined. And is this ink?!
[To the Humboldt Squid wearing a maid’s uniform]
That’s it! Back to the Sea of Cortés with you! And you can forget about ever getting that green card!
Goddamn employment agency told me I was getting a Diablo Rojo–I thought it was some sort of sentient vacuum.
shamarsays
Awesome picture…thanks for posting PZ :-)
Pierce R. Butlersays
Can we have a video of that, please?
Scored with The Ride of the Valkyries?
Religion™ Brand Brain Staplessays
This made my day. Absolutely amazing.
Steve_Csays
I love how the tentacles are posed perfectly for flight. Great color too.
Sven DIMilosays
I tis a decapodiform, taxonomically (as are all cephalopods except nautilids, octopuses, and the vampire “squid”).
If you are counting arms on the illustration of the larva, there is a stubby pair of #5 arms behind the fused tentacles (=#4).
Sven DIMilosays
…and the tentacles come unfused during ontogeny.
Pierce R. Butlersays
My apologies to earlier commenters on having missed previous Valkyries requests.
On repeated viewing, our flying friend here must also be complimented for such a tasteful color scheme. It’s very rare for blue and orange to look good together.
Excuse me, there’s a knock at the door…
*is beaten to a pulp by University of Florida cheerleaders*
Sven DIMilosays
*is beaten to a pulp by University of Florida cheerleaders*
The first time I heard of these critters was when I read Kon Tiki in the 1950s. Thor Heyerdahl described them flying aboard the raft. IIRC, at least one landed on the roof of the raft’s shelter, meaning it got on the order of two meters above the water.
SC, OMsays
On repeated viewing, our flying friend here must also be complimented for such a tasteful color scheme. It’s very rare for blue and orange to look good together.
I’ve always thought whoever designed the Frederic Fekkai packaging did a nice job with the combination (OK, so it’s more of a terra cotta, but still, it’s a cool Mediterranean feel):
I tis a decapodiform, taxonomically (as are all cephalopods except nautilids, octopuses, and the vampire “squid”).
If you are counting arms on the illustration of the larva, there is a stubby pair of #5 arms behind the fused tentacles (=#4).
Yes, I was looking at the larva diagram. I stand corrected, thanks, Sven.
I tis a decapodiform, taxonomically (as are all cephalopods except nautilids, octopuses, and the vampire “squid”).
If you are counting arms on the illustration of the larva, there is a stubby pair of #5 arms behind the fused tentacles (=#4).
Yes, I was looking at the larva diagram. I stand corrected, thanks, Sven.
SteveMsays
Sorry for the double comment. Nothing to do with Scienceblog’s famous “black screen of posting delay”.
Penguin_Factorysays
What the hell? Is that thing real? 0_o
amphioxsays
That is an amazing picture. It is so brightly colored that for a minute I had to do a double-take, thinking it looked like a plastic model.
Re: Fred the Hun #47, and any other B5 fans out there,
In the one scene shown of a (well two, actually) Vorlon in its natural state (ie not trying hide its appearance somehow), I think it’s a toss up as to whether they resemble cephalopods the most, or hydra. Their spaceships, of course, are clearly cephalopod derived (and as organic vessels, they might even BE cephalopods). Perhaps that was the real reason they visited earth at all, all that rest about manipulating genomes and breeding telepaths being so much misdirection.
Ragutissays
Why should Exocoetidae have all the fun?
That is quite awesome, PZ. And gorgeous to boot. Thanks!
RickKsays
Stupid question from someone who is tentacle-challenged:
Is the “c” in cephalapod hard or soft? Is it “sephalapod” or “kephalapod”?
kamakasays
sephalopod
Ragutissays
It’s k, like in Krzyzewski.
;p
Number8Davesays
I think TEO (#14) might be right. This looks a bit slender to be Ommastrephes bartramii. I remember seeing one that we caught while midwater trawling off the west coast of New Zealand (Taranaki) when I was doing my field work on enoploteuthids. It was a massive thing, almost a metre long and very bulky. And blood red – must’ve been very pissed off.
A rather over-the-top mad scientist, the Octopus worked from a big city hospital and plotted world conquest. His appearance might explain his desire to dominate the world; he’s sea-green, with four “suction-cupped weaving tentacles” set above “hideously malformed” legs.
RickK #83: In the parts where I hail from, the “c” is soft, but I don’t presume to speak for all places and languages.
But at any rate, a squid by any other pronunciation would taste just as sweet.
And an Old One by any other feeble attempt at correlation would be just as pitiless.
James McCannsays
I never realized squid were beautiful before.
atomjacksays
“I’m learning to fly, but I don’t have wings…”
Yes, I’m currently listening to Pink Floyd.
Given the brain/body ratio, this fella must actually be levitating. Sweet stuff abounds on this site!
thiolsulfatesays
CTHULHU FHTAGN
Leesays
Ah, memories… squid and flying fish
I once sailed in the TransPac yacht race from southern California to Hawaii in a 40′ sailboat.
Once we got down into the tropics, flying fish were common – the pressure wave at the bow would startle them into flying, presumably to get away for the large predator’ our boat felt like. In the day, they would generally fly directly away form the boat – but at night, they seemed to be attracted to the boat, perhaps from instrument lights or moonlight, glinting off the sails. We would find them when they flew into the sails and then fell into the boat.
We never saw a squid in the day – but at night, they seemed to be at the surface, and reacted the same as the flying fish. We would sometimes collect a couple dozen from the cockpit – usually after we found them by putting a hand on one, is stepping on it with our sea boots and sliding across the deck. Little guys, 3- 5″ long, but they jumped and ‘flew’ well enough to come aboard in decent numbers,for several nights in a row.
At one 2 am watch change, the watch captain carried a handful of small squid when he went below to wake the next watch, and dropped one squid into each sea boot as he was doing it. Squish. Obscenities. Good times.
That same night, I was on helm when a pair of flying fish bracketed my head, one on each side within a foot of me. Those guys move really fast – it would have really hurt if they hit me. About 10 minutes later, a squid hit me in the side of the face – thought at first it was a flying fish, and it scared the bejeebers out of me.
Sing with glee
Tekeli-li
Tekeli-li
In our cultish disguises
prasays
that’s awesome. I wonder they will evolve active flying some day. Maybe with some kind of biological jet engine, powered by modified ink glands? :D
Fred the Hunsays
I wonder they will evolve active flying some day. Maybe with some kind of biological jet engine, powered by modified ink glands? :D
If you ever see them in their natural habitat hovering, darting etc… you will understand that that is exactly what they do. Its just that the fluid is liquid not gaseous.
Fred the Hunsays
Except for the modified ink glands…
Aeriksays
Looks like a fishing lure. Mwa ha ha.
Sven DiMilosays
“I’m learning to fly, but I don’t have wings…”
Yes, I’m currently listening to Pink Floyd.
isn’t that Tom Petty though?
Menyambalsays
Beautiful!
I remember the first and only time I ever saw flying fish, but I never imagined flying squidlets. Wow.
I thought at first that leaping into the air would expose the little guys to bird attacks, but I bet they catch the birds by surprise. (Reminds me of a thought while reading about Edicarian life–at that early stage of evolution, being up against the water’s surface was a good idea, as there was NOTHING above the water.
I’ve been wanting to see a decent picture of one of those legendary critters in gliding flight for over 40 years after I first heard about them!
For a few decades there I was beginning to think the tales a little exaggerated…even after examing some specimens that, sure enough SEEMED to have the accroutrements, although the winged airfoil action of the WEBBED TENTACLES – in ADDITION to the fins on the mantle – never quite gelled in my mind how they would be deployed so BEAUTIFULLY LIKE THAT!!!
If I had visualized anything NEARLY resembling anything like what I’m now looking at right now, I would have dismissed it as a fantasy.
I
am
KNOCKED
RIGHT
OUT.
I mean, I can’t even get over how it arranges its tentacles to shed water efficiently…NOW I can see what’s going on….
POSITIVELY GORGEOUS.
Thank you PZ for scaring this one up for us!
Absolutely stunning. Now I KNOW some squids DO take to the air, and with MAGNIFICENT AERODYNAMIC GRACEFULNESS (instead of merely jumping out of the water).
sarahsays
have you ever heard of the tree octopus it has a website but it is so fake but this is so cool and real!!!!!!!!!!!!
You said it, sarah!
Take a look at the archives–every Friday there’s another more-or-less equally cool animal posted.
Sven DiMilosays
From Todd’s Blog (linked in #109):
Why all the similarity in creation? Why do I have proteins significantly similar to those of bacteria? Whence the “vertebrate archetype?” I think God wants us to know something about Him, but I can’t quite see what it is. Sometimes this question is frustrating because I haven’t yet figured out how to ask the right question. I think I’m close to an answer, but then… not. Like I’m hovering on the verge of eureka. It’s hard to explain….Figure that one out and the answers to most of our other questions will just fall into our laps. We’ll be able to see what the created kinds are and how to recognize them. We’ll instantly see the places where creation went “wrong” and that will tell us how it happened. Knowing the created kinds will make biogeography semi-intelligible. And chimps – we’ll know why God made chimps (and Australopithecines, but I’d just be happy understanding the chimp genome).
So in the end, I guess I’m searching for the voice of God, the words He etched into creation.
or…hmmmmm. If only there was a simple, straightforward explanation that was consistent with all of the physical evidence. But what single idea could possibly be the answer to all those questions?
It’s a real puzzler.
Nerd of Redhead, OMsays
Right Sven, science uses evidence. The intellectually challenged add in their presupposed god and think they have made a breakthrough that the scientists refuse to see. Todd must demonstrate the physical evidence for his god first. I’ll bet he just can’t see the need to show evidence.
a lurkersays
I submitted the following to Fark.com:
(Sadly an Honest Creationist)
Weird
Creationist “biologist” charged up by God’s grace, the smell of rain, and eating grilled octopus. Wonders “Why do I have proteins significantly similar to those of bacteria?” If only some theory covered that
I would have loved to have it as some theory that could explain the similarities and differences between different types of organisms but that would have made the headline too long. (And also one of my pet peeves is always mentioning that evolution can explain similarity without mentioning it can explain the who pattern of both similarities and differences. The common creator might explain some similarities, but not the who tapestry.
a lurkersays
The last two words of my last comment should be “whole tapestry” and not “who tapestry”. Sorry about that.
Anonymous says
awesome
vespera says
Awwwwesome. I want one.
azqaz says
I love that they even spread and flatten ther tentacles out to increase their hang time. Now to go look up more about them.
Caveman73 says
Wow! That is so cool. I have never seen them out to sea. I’ve the flying fish but not the flying squid. Where or what ocean would you see them in? BTW I’m active duty Navy.
Multicellular says
This so made my day. Totally pegged my awe meter.
NewEnglandBob says
Couldn’t get it to smile for the picture?
Hannah says
Wow – I totally didn’t know they could do that XD
Lorkas says
Go click the Hovind iPod link. There’s now a video with an absurd argument for why the Grand Canyon must have formed during Noah’s flood.
Greg says
That’s it we as may well surrender now. They’ve taken to the skies.
Lorkas says
@#4
ScienceDirect says that they are in the North Pacific.
Knockgoats says
Is it a bird? Is it a plane? No! It’s Ommastrephes bartramii!
SC, OM says
That is FANTASTIC. My favorite yet.
Magnus says
We’re f*cked now.
TEO says
I think this species is Sthenoteuthis oualaniensis
squall25 says
Quick. Where is the Mega Shark?
JJR says
It’s a bird, it’s a plane, it’s a….flying SQUID?!
gillt says
The question becomes: What can’t cephalopods do?
Nerd of Redhead, OM says
Is there anything cephalopods won’t do?
Sven DIMilo says
oh-so-cool.
Check the resemblance between the webbed-tentacle shape and a sphinx moth.
Stephen Wells says
They can fly. There’s nowhere to hide any more. Well, Arizona, I guess.
Hmmm. Can we give a squid some hydrogen-production genes so as to produce a floating (flammable) tentacled gasbag? Silent and camouflaged in sky-blue, they drift and ripple through the skies, descending to grasp their prey and lift them skywards to feed. The Tentacled Rapture.
—I probably need less coffee.
Larynx says
There’s clearly a B-movie film right here!
Does anyone know why it can ‘fly’?
Anon says
Up in the air, Junior Squidman…
Evolving Squid says
As far as we know, they don’t strap bombs to themselves and explode in other schools of squids who have different invisible friends.
JackC says
Too bad. Yesterday, this little cutie could have gotten a pair of nice Hang Time watchs from woot.com for only a couple of bucks.
JC
Rev. BigDumbChimp says
Holy Shit.
I for one will welcome our flying squid overloards when then take over.
Moth Eyes says
Larynx: Well, flying fish do it to evade predators, so that seems like a plausible purpose.
The Petey says
The only thing I can think of is Sally Field
And SQUIDGET as the Flying Nun
Chris Davis says
Didn’t I see one of these on a T-shirt somewhere recently?
2 cents says
Yikes! Compare it to a photo of predator drones like the US is using in Afghanistan. Very similar in configuration.
ice9 says
Amazing photograph.
The trick is getting them to bounce from the flour into the hot oil. Get that licked and you’re good to go.
ice
PsyberDave says
See, this is how squids turn into birds. It is proof of evolution!
Sili says
Great. I’m never going near water ever again.
Re Ipod: can’t we get permanent link somewhere? I keep forgetting to go look for it.
Rev. BigDumbChimp says
Be un-delicious
tms says
Wagner’s, Flight of the Valkyries is now running through my head.
Thanks loads,
T
Matt Heath says
I think I speak for many of us when I say “ZOMFFSM!! That squid is fucking gliding!!!1”
Knockgoats says
Hi, welcome back SC! New machine humming along well?
deviljelly says
Which direction is it “flying in”? right to left? i.e. backwards?
bobxxxx says
Perhaps these creatures can glide above the water thanks to natural selection. Their ancestors who could stay out of the water the longest didn’t become another animal’s lunch. Or maybe god magically gave them this ability.
SteveM says
I assume it is flying to the left since that is the direction its water jet would propel it.
What I want to see is whatever was chasing it that scared it enough to lauch itself out of the water.
Moggie says
#34:
I love the smell of squid in the morning.
Glen Davidson says
So much for the UFO phenomenon. This even explains the abductions…
Glen D
http://tinyurl.com/6mb592
SteveM says
Anybody notice that this flying squid only has 6 arms? And people were complaining that the one on the T-shirt only had 6.
kamaka says
Which direction is it “flying in”? right to left? i.e. backwards?
Look at the water droplets.
Why couldn’t I get a cool toy like that when I was a kid?
LanceR, JSG says
Now if we can just put frickin’ lasers on their heads!
1. Flying squid
2. Flying squid with frickin’ lasers on their heads.
3. ???
4. WORLD DOMINATION! (and profit!)
LadyH says
Did this photo get photoshopped? I looks like someone ran it thru the paint daubs filter.
SC, OM says
Hi! Thanks! (I was so happy to see you’d returned a couple of weeks ago – missed you terribly in some of the political discussions.)
So far! I can’t seem to get the battery to lock in place as I assume it should, but other than that I’m loving it.
Fred the Hun says
It’s an adolescent Vorlon having a bit of fun!
Anonymous says
It’s. So. Cute.
David Marjanović, OM says
Live in freshwater.
There are actually 8. Follow the link to the source. (Still, 8 and not 10.)
Kat says
I wonder how you would express “WHEEEEEEEEEEEEEE!” in cephalopod?
….because that’s got to be what that little guy is feeling…
Kevin Schreck says
I didn’t know that this species was so colorful. Lovely!
uppity cracka says
you guys will like this:
http://www.explosm.net/db/files/Comics/Matt/omnipotent-beings-correcting-their-mistakes.png
AdamK says
Now THAT’s transcendent!
Sven DIMilo says
I see no reason to think that it doesn’t have 8 arms + 2 tentacles like all the other decapodiform cephalopods do.
meh1963 says
> Is there anything cephalopods won’t do?
Touch-type. Or fly by instruments only.
Tik says
My first thought was of the Cuttlefish comic from xkcd. Amazing creatures are everywhere.
knathon says
And to think some Ommastrephids are 7-foot long, have a temper and are invading into Pacific Northwestern coast of the US
Brownian, OM says
What’s the big deal? My 1.3 average in biology led me to believe all squid fly.
Show me a bird that can run really fast or a reptile that lives in the ocean and maybe then I’ll be impressed.
Happy Tentacles says
I love the flying squid! And it doesn’t even need quantum wings to do it! Next step – world domination by the Tentacled Overlords…
Tik says
There are ten legs in the photo. Distribution in the photo appears to be left to right 1a 2a 1a+1t 1a+1t 2a 1a, where a=arm and t=tentacle. Membranes appear to connect the appendages to the two adjacent appendages. Think of a flattened umbrella.
SteveM says
There are actually 8. Follow the link to the source. (Still, 8 and not 10.)
Yes, I did before, 6 arms and the 2 tentacles are fused together so I didn’t know if they still count as 2 or one, or even if they still work as a tentacle. So is this actually a heptapus?
Sven, click on the photo to see that it is not a decapod.
Brownian, OM says
Sort my whites and colours, apparently.
Look at this. My favourite shirt, ruined. And is this ink?!
[To the Humboldt Squid wearing a maid’s uniform]
That’s it! Back to the Sea of Cortés with you! And you can forget about ever getting that green card!
Goddamn employment agency told me I was getting a Diablo Rojo–I thought it was some sort of sentient vacuum.
shamar says
Awesome picture…thanks for posting PZ :-)
Pierce R. Butler says
Can we have a video of that, please?
Scored with The Ride of the Valkyries?
Religion™ Brand Brain Staples says
This made my day. Absolutely amazing.
Steve_C says
I love how the tentacles are posed perfectly for flight. Great color too.
Sven DIMilo says
I tis a decapodiform, taxonomically (as are all cephalopods except nautilids, octopuses, and the vampire “squid”).
If you are counting arms on the illustration of the larva, there is a stubby pair of #5 arms behind the fused tentacles (=#4).
Sven DIMilo says
…and the tentacles come unfused during ontogeny.
Pierce R. Butler says
My apologies to earlier commenters on having missed previous Valkyries requests.
On repeated viewing, our flying friend here must also be complimented for such a tasteful color scheme. It’s very rare for blue and orange to look good together.
Excuse me, there’s a knock at the door…
*is beaten to a pulp by University of Florida cheerleaders*
Sven DIMilo says
video?
John says
That’s completely awesome. Has anyone ever gotten video of them doing that?
RBH says
The first time I heard of these critters was when I read Kon Tiki in the 1950s. Thor Heyerdahl described them flying aboard the raft. IIRC, at least one landed on the roof of the raft’s shelter, meaning it got on the order of two meters above the water.
SC, OM says
I’ve always thought whoever designed the Frederic Fekkai packaging did a nice job with the combination (OK, so it’s more of a terra cotta, but still, it’s a cool Mediterranean feel):
http://www.fekkai.com/collection/marine-hair
SteveM says
Yes, I was looking at the larva diagram. I stand corrected, thanks, Sven.
Pareidolius says
Open the cephalopod bay doors HAL.
Chant says
You’ll believe a squid can fly…
Strider says
Stunningly lovely.
SteveM says
Yes, I was looking at the larva diagram. I stand corrected, thanks, Sven.
SteveM says
Sorry for the double comment. Nothing to do with Scienceblog’s famous “black screen of posting delay”.
Penguin_Factory says
What the hell? Is that thing real? 0_o
amphiox says
That is an amazing picture. It is so brightly colored that for a minute I had to do a double-take, thinking it looked like a plastic model.
Re: Fred the Hun #47, and any other B5 fans out there,
In the one scene shown of a (well two, actually) Vorlon in its natural state (ie not trying hide its appearance somehow), I think it’s a toss up as to whether they resemble cephalopods the most, or hydra. Their spaceships, of course, are clearly cephalopod derived (and as organic vessels, they might even BE cephalopods). Perhaps that was the real reason they visited earth at all, all that rest about manipulating genomes and breeding telepaths being so much misdirection.
Ragutis says
Why should Exocoetidae have all the fun?
That is quite awesome, PZ. And gorgeous to boot. Thanks!
RickK says
Stupid question from someone who is tentacle-challenged:
Is the “c” in cephalapod hard or soft? Is it “sephalapod” or “kephalapod”?
kamaka says
sephalopod
Ragutis says
It’s k, like in Krzyzewski.
;p
Number8Dave says
I think TEO (#14) might be right. This looks a bit slender to be Ommastrephes bartramii. I remember seeing one that we caught while midwater trawling off the west coast of New Zealand (Taranaki) when I was doing my field work on enoploteuthids. It was a massive thing, almost a metre long and very bulky. And blood red – must’ve been very pissed off.
goldra says
Wonderful stuff. Symmetry in motion.
Tom Foss says
It’s not often I see a genuine picture that looks so blatantly photoshopped. I guess reality is unrealistic.
MadScientist says
It’s beautiful! I wonder if it tastes good. I thought it was an animal created with a photo editor.
Rowan says
Breathtakingly beautiful.
José says
If birds evolved from squid, why are there still squid?
Blake Stacey says
Incidentally. . .
With pictures.
amphiox says
RickK #83: In the parts where I hail from, the “c” is soft, but I don’t presume to speak for all places and languages.
But at any rate, a squid by any other pronunciation would taste just as sweet.
And an Old One by any other feeble attempt at correlation would be just as pitiless.
James McCann says
I never realized squid were beautiful before.
atomjack says
“I’m learning to fly, but I don’t have wings…”
Yes, I’m currently listening to Pink Floyd.
Given the brain/body ratio, this fella must actually be levitating. Sweet stuff abounds on this site!
thiolsulfate says
CTHULHU FHTAGN
Lee says
Ah, memories… squid and flying fish
I once sailed in the TransPac yacht race from southern California to Hawaii in a 40′ sailboat.
Once we got down into the tropics, flying fish were common – the pressure wave at the bow would startle them into flying, presumably to get away for the large predator’ our boat felt like. In the day, they would generally fly directly away form the boat – but at night, they seemed to be attracted to the boat, perhaps from instrument lights or moonlight, glinting off the sails. We would find them when they flew into the sails and then fell into the boat.
We never saw a squid in the day – but at night, they seemed to be at the surface, and reacted the same as the flying fish. We would sometimes collect a couple dozen from the cockpit – usually after we found them by putting a hand on one, is stepping on it with our sea boots and sliding across the deck. Little guys, 3- 5″ long, but they jumped and ‘flew’ well enough to come aboard in decent numbers,for several nights in a row.
At one 2 am watch change, the watch captain carried a handful of small squid when he went below to wake the next watch, and dropped one squid into each sea boot as he was doing it. Squish. Obscenities. Good times.
That same night, I was on helm when a pair of flying fish bracketed my head, one on each side within a foot of me. Those guys move really fast – it would have really hurt if they hit me. About 10 minutes later, a squid hit me in the side of the face – thought at first it was a flying fish, and it scared the bejeebers out of me.
Bart B. Van Bockstaele says
This is a beautiful animal. So colourful, it looks like it’s made of glass.
Nevertheless, I can’t help but wonder why it isn’t swimming in garlic butter on my plate right now.
Gorogh says
This of course reminds me of the famous line,
Oh what fun
Cthulhu fhtagn
Cthulhu fhtagn
All will chant as he rises
Sing with glee
Tekeli-li
Tekeli-li
In our cultish disguises
pra says
that’s awesome. I wonder they will evolve active flying some day. Maybe with some kind of biological jet engine, powered by modified ink glands? :D
Fred the Hun says
If you ever see them in their natural habitat hovering, darting etc… you will understand that that is exactly what they do. Its just that the fluid is liquid not gaseous.
Fred the Hun says
Except for the modified ink glands…
Aerik says
Looks like a fishing lure. Mwa ha ha.
Sven DiMilo says
isn’t that Tom Petty though?
Menyambal says
Beautiful!
I remember the first and only time I ever saw flying fish, but I never imagined flying squidlets. Wow.
I thought at first that leaping into the air would expose the little guys to bird attacks, but I bet they catch the birds by surprise. (Reminds me of a thought while reading about Edicarian life–at that early stage of evolution, being up against the water’s surface was a good idea, as there was NOTHING above the water.
_Learning to Fly_ is Floyd.
Sven DiMilo says
Learning to Fly
Learning to Fly
astrounit says
OH, man, I very nearly missed this one!
I’ve been wanting to see a decent picture of one of those legendary critters in gliding flight for over 40 years after I first heard about them!
For a few decades there I was beginning to think the tales a little exaggerated…even after examing some specimens that, sure enough SEEMED to have the accroutrements, although the winged airfoil action of the WEBBED TENTACLES – in ADDITION to the fins on the mantle – never quite gelled in my mind how they would be deployed so BEAUTIFULLY LIKE THAT!!!
If I had visualized anything NEARLY resembling anything like what I’m now looking at right now, I would have dismissed it as a fantasy.
I
am
KNOCKED
RIGHT
OUT.
I mean, I can’t even get over how it arranges its tentacles to shed water efficiently…NOW I can see what’s going on….
POSITIVELY GORGEOUS.
Thank you PZ for scaring this one up for us!
Absolutely stunning. Now I KNOW some squids DO take to the air, and with MAGNIFICENT AERODYNAMIC GRACEFULNESS (instead of merely jumping out of the water).
sarah says
have you ever heard of the tree octopus it has a website but it is so fake but this is so cool and real!!!!!!!!!!!!
a lurker says
Time for a “Friday” creationist: Todd Wood mentions sometime he likes to eat. Also he keeps up is “Sadly, an Honest” reputation with his comment on a recently discovered transitional fossil.
Sven DiMilo says
You said it, sarah!
Take a look at the archives–every Friday there’s another more-or-less equally cool animal posted.
Sven DiMilo says
From Todd’s Blog (linked in #109):
or…hmmmmm. If only there was a simple, straightforward explanation that was consistent with all of the physical evidence. But what single idea could possibly be the answer to all those questions?
It’s a real puzzler.
Nerd of Redhead, OM says
Right Sven, science uses evidence. The intellectually challenged add in their presupposed god and think they have made a breakthrough that the scientists refuse to see. Todd must demonstrate the physical evidence for his god first. I’ll bet he just can’t see the need to show evidence.
a lurker says
I submitted the following to Fark.com:
(Sadly an Honest Creationist)
Weird
Creationist “biologist” charged up by God’s grace, the smell of rain, and eating grilled octopus. Wonders “Why do I have proteins significantly similar to those of bacteria?” If only some theory covered that
I would have loved to have it as some theory that could explain the similarities and differences between different types of organisms but that would have made the headline too long. (And also one of my pet peeves is always mentioning that evolution can explain similarity without mentioning it can explain the who pattern of both similarities and differences. The common creator might explain some similarities, but not the who tapestry.
a lurker says
The last two words of my last comment should be “whole tapestry” and not “who tapestry”. Sorry about that.
numba-1-stunna says
OMG that pic is so obv fake
Arid says
What an amazing photo!