Ngerchong
Inside dive site (Palau)
Photo courtesy of Liz Tuttle |
The cuttlefish possesses a beak-like mouth...
The cuttlefish can range in size from 1 inch to 3 feet (and even bigger in the case of the giant Australian cuttlefish which may grow to the size of a small man). It possesses eight sucker-lined arms and two prehensile tentacles (which can be withdrawn into pouches under the eyes) and a sharp, beak-like mouth which allows it to cut open flesh like a pair of scissors, so it can use its tentacles to tear out meat. It hunts during daylight, feeding primarily on small fish, crustaceans and other mollusks.
It moves about by means of propulsion
It moves about in the water by way of a complex propulsion and bouyancy system (much like a submarine). "The cuttlefish propels itself using a series of spurts, drawing water into a compression chamber which it squeezes to jet the water out a funnel under the head. Direction changes can be made by swivelling the nozzle of this funnel, and narrowing the funnel controls speed. Like a submarine, the cuttlefish fills tiny compartments in its cuttlebone with gas to help maintain neutral buoyancy. This helps the cephalopod hover above the ocean floor, because although it has a sophisticated propulsion system its large cuttlebone does not allow it to be overly active, or quick in the water. " [1]
The cuttlefish is a bottom-dweller which often lies in ambush for smaller animals. For this way of life, it needs to keep itself at neutral buoyancy, so that it neither sinks nor rises...in order to be able to operate at varying depths and water densities, cuttlefish need to be able to adjust their overall density so as to always remain ‘neutral’ in the water. The cuttlefish does this by an ingenious mechanism. The bony shell actually has many narrow chambers. If these were all filled with gas, they would give a lift of up to 4% of the animal’s weight. However, they are only part-filled with gas—the darker areas shown are where it is part-filled with liquid. The cuttlefish is able to pump liquid in and out of that section as needed to keep the buoyancy ‘just right’. [1]
Staying neutral
Redrawn
after Clarkson, E.,
Invertebrate
Palaeontology and Evolution,
George
Allen and Unwin, London,
1979
(Seventh impression 1984), p.167. |
The cuttlefish actually has 3 hearts
The cuttlefish actually has 3 hearts - one for each set of gills and one for the remaining body. Unlike our own blood which gets its red color from the pigment hemoglobin, the cuttlefish's heart pumps blue-green blood which uses hemocyanin pigment to carry oxygen. Its skin is comprised of 3 layers of color pigment cells called chromatophores. These cells are controlled by the nervous system which signals them to expand or contract at a remarkable speed allowing for the hypnotic transformation of the cuttlefish's coloration and pattern.
A strange fact about cuttlefish...
Close-up of a cuttlefish eye
Photo
courtesy of Wikipedia |
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[1] Weston, Paula,
‘Fascinating Cuttlefish', answersingenesis.org, March 1, 1997.
[2] Lad, Kashmira,
‘Cuttlefish Facts', buzzle.com.
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