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hatrack

(59,584 posts)
Wed Jan 9, 2013, 09:59 AM Jan 2013

Japanese Scientists Get First Video Footage Ever Of Giant Squid In Wild (Short Clip At Link)

Last summer, after 55 dives, three scientists in a submarine off the coast of Japan encountered an animal people have mythologized and feared for thousands of years: the giant squid. According to the researchers with Japan's National Science Museum they managed to capture the first footage ever (see below) of a giant squid in its natural habitat, although photos were also released in 2005 of a giant squid feeding.

"It was shining and so beautiful," Tsunemi Kubodera from Japan's National Science Museum told the AFP of the encounter with the kraken. "I was so thrilled when I saw it first hand, but I was confident we would because we rigorously researched the areas we might find it, based on past data."

Descending over 2,000 feet below sea level, the scientists were able to attract the giant squid—mentioned both in 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea and Moby Dick—with a smaller squid as bait. They first encountered the giant squid at 2,066 feet below sea level and then followed it down to 2,952 feet. Interestingly, the individual caught on film had lost its two longest tentacles, making it far shorter than other specimens.

Giant squid have been referred to by scientists going as far back as Aristotle, but thousands of years later and we still know little about them. To date, scientists have described several species of giant squid, all in the Architeuthis genus. These squid have the largest eyes of any animal on the planet, often compared to a dinner plate. As large as they are, giant squid are actually preyed on by sperm whales, encounters that artists have imaginatively depicted for centuries.

EDIT

Read more at http://news.mongabay.com/2013/0108-hance-giant-squid-video.html#HlpDDeKGJfM0bwCk.99

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Japanese Scientists Get First Video Footage Ever Of Giant Squid In Wild (Short Clip At Link) (Original Post) hatrack Jan 2013 OP
Interestingly, it appears mostly red in this clip. eppur_se_muova Jan 2013 #1
It was good of them to let it live stuntcat Jan 2013 #2

eppur_se_muova

(36,261 posts)
1. Interestingly, it appears mostly red in this clip.
Wed Jan 9, 2013, 11:42 AM
Jan 2013

The one seen earlier made it appear silver. Red is more consistent with other sightings and specimens (mostly carcasses). Also, red is virtually invisible in the ocean depths, since the light is blue-green.

The eye appears white, unlike the specimen caught at the surface, which had a yellow eye. Can't see the pupil that well, but it appears it may be catlike. I believe the live specimen found at the surface also showed a catlike pupil.

stuntcat

(12,022 posts)
2. It was good of them to let it live
Wed Jan 9, 2013, 12:57 PM
Jan 2013

Usually when I see giant sea creatures, like rays or squids, it's after they've been killed. Sometimes they even have happy "sportsmen" standing next to them.

It kills me how the article ends with "Given their elusive-nature and their deep sea habitat, scientists have no idea if these animals are endangered or currently face any human-related threats."
Whoever wrote that somehow doesn't realize every species bigger than ants is facing human-related threats.

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