The species of Octopus are found on the shores of almost all temperate and tropical seas; they do not attain to a large size, and are without the internal shell or “bone” which is found in the mantle of many Cephalopods. That of the Cuttlefish or Sepia (Fig. 43 a) is found in abundance on our coasts; it is composed of numberless layers of a friable calcareous substance. That of the Squid tribe is of quite another character, consisting of an elongate thin horny plate, and strengthened by one or more thickened ribs, in some species somewhat resembling a quill-pen. Some species of this pen-bearing class related to the Common Squid attain an immense size. One was captured off the Irish coast in June, 1875 (probably Architeuthis harveyi), with the shorter arms 8 feet in length and 15 inches in circumference at the base, the two tentacular arms having a total length of 30 feet. The powerful beak measured about 4 inches across. Thus from the tip of the tail to the end of the tentacular arms this wonderful monster must have measured something like 40 feet in length. Other very large specimens of Architeuthis have been captured on the coasts of Newfoundland and Labrador. Two specimens stranded on the south coast of Newfoundland, in the winter of 1870–1871, measured respectively 40 and 47 feet. Another, cast ashore at Bonavista Bay in December, 1873, had a very stout body 14 feet long, arms 10 feet, and tentacles 24 feet in length. These are only a few of the many instances of the capture of gigantic Cephalopods, which occur not only in the North-Atlantic Ocean, but also in tropical seas. Their appearance in mid-ocean may, in some instances, have given rise to the tales of “Sea-serpents.” Specimens much smaller than those mentioned above have attacked men, and pearl-fishers are in constant fear of them. One of the arms of a large Squid (Architeuthis harveyi?), which is supposed to have been found off the coast of South America, is exhibited in the black upright Case A at the side of the room.
Fig. 43.
The Common Cuttlefish (Sepia officinalis), and its shell or bone (a).
The shells of Spirula (Fig. 44) have been long known, and are scattered in thousands on the shores of New Zealand and other islands in the Pacific Ocean, and they are also found in the Indian and Atlantic Oceans, occasionally drifting on the coast of Devon and Cornwall. Notwithstanding the abundance of the shells, very few specimens of the perfect animal have been captured. The loosely-coiled shell resembles a ram’s horn, and is divided into a number of segments by fine concave partitions, like the shell of Nautilus, each one pierced by a slender tube or siphon. It is placed at the hinder end of the body, and is covered with so thin a skin, that a small portion of it appears to be exposed both in front and behind. Absolutely nothing is known of the habits of this very interesting creature, although probably they are somewhat similar to those of other Cephalopods.
Fig. 44.
The Spirula (Spirula peronii). (From the Indian and Pacific Oceans.)
1. Animal: a, portions of the shell exposed in front and behind; b, the funnel or siphuncle. 2. Side view of shell. 3. Shell in section, to show partitions or septa.
The Nautilus (Fig. 45), of which several shells (Case 208) and a perfect animal in spirit (black upright case A) are exhibited, is an inhabitant of the Indo-Pacific Ocean, and differs from all other living Cephalopods in being provided with four instead of two gills, and, instead of eight or ten arms with suckers and hooks, has a number of small retractile feelers. The Nautilus occasionally swims, like other members of its class, at the surface of the sea, but mostly crawls about leisurely on its feet at the bottom in search of food, which consists chiefly of small crabs or Mollusca, which it crushes with its strong calcareous parrot-like mandibles.
Fig. 45.
The Pearly Nautilus (Nautilus pompilius).
a, body; b, siphuncle; c, eye; d, hood; e, tentacles; f, muscle of attachment to the shell; g, siphon.
The chambered shell is pearly within, and covered with an external calcareous layer. The chambers are connected by a slender tube or siphon, the function of which is not at present thoroughly understood. The septa, or partitions across the shell, indicate periods of growth. When the Nautilus outgrows the capacity of the outer chamber, in which it resides, it constructs a new one of larger size, separating the additional chamber from the preceding one by a transverse partition.