- Southern Dumpling Squid
Taxobox
name = Southern Dumpling Squid
regnum =Animal ia
phylum =Mollusc a
classis =Cephalopod a
ordo =Sepiolida
familia =Sepiolidae
genus = "Euprymna "
species = "E. tasmanica"
binomial = "Euprymna tasmanica"
binomial_authority = Pfeffer,1884 The Southern Dumpling Squid is a benthos
bobtail squid which lives in the shallow (0.5 m to at least 80 m)temperate coastal waters of southernAustralia 's continental shelf. It lives for between 5 and 8 months and the adults can grow up to 6 or 7 cm long with a mantle length of 3 or 4 cm. They are found inseagrass beds or areas with soft silty or muddy bottoms fromBrisbane on the east coast toShark Bay on the west, as well as aroundTasmania . Southern Dumpling Squid are nocturnal and during the day hide in sand or mud covered in a mucus-lined coat of sediment. If disturbed acid glans can quickly remove this coat as an additional decoy to ink squirting.Physical appearance
Like some other bobtail squid , Southern Dumpling Squid have a light organ fuelled by
symbiotic bioluminescent bacteria . The light organ which is butterfly-shaped is in the mantle cavity and is used to cancel out the bobtail squid's silhouette. There are large semi-circular fins on the rear half of the mantle. Although they can change colour, they are usually an iridescent green or yellow with brown spots. The bobtail squid have four rows of suckers on each arm and both their arms and tentacles are armed with toothed horny rim.Reproduction
Like many
cephalopod s the male can be distinguished from the female by an enlargedhectocotylus which occurs as the first left arm . Females lay 2 or 3 batches of round creamy orange eggs (25 - 170 eggs per batch) over a few weeks towards the end of their life. Females die between a week and a fortnight after laying eggs and males die a short time after mating multiple times. Females mate with many partners and may use the sperm of more than one partner for one batch of eggs. Depending on temperature incubation can take up to four and a half months, because of this the eggs must be comparatively large to provide enough yolk for successful embryonic development. If the female's are underfed while producing eggs they tend to produce fewer and smaller eggs which leads to high embryo mortality rates. Parent Southern Dumpling Squid do not look after their young however the hatchlings are highly developed when born and are capable of catching prey up to twice their size. Young are not born with the needed bacteria for their light organ and must capture them from the water column before the light organ can develop.Naming
The Southern Dumpling Squid is sometimes incorrectly referred to as the
Southern Bobtail Squid . Although the Southern Dumpling Squid is a bobtail squid, this name refers to a different smaller Australian species of bobtail squid which has yet to be scientifically named.References
*M Norman & A Reid, (2000), "A Guide to Squid, Cuttlefish and Octopuses of Australasia". Moorabbin, The Gould League of Australia. ISBN 0-643-06577-6
*M A Steer, N A Moltschaniwskyj, D S Nichols and M Miller, (2004), The role of temperature and maternal ration in embryo survival: using the dumpling squid "Euprymna tasmanica" as a model, "Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology" 307, pp. 73-89.External links
* [http://www.scuba-equipment-usa.com/marine/FEB04/Southern_Dumpling_Squid(Euprymna_tasmanica).html Marine species gallery]
* [http://www.thecephalopodpage.org/Etasmanica.php The cephalopod page]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.