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Comprehensive Description ( Inglês )

fornecido por Smithsonian Contributions to Zoology
Eucleoteuthis luminosa (Sasaki, 1915)

DIAGNOSIS.—As for genus.

ORIGINAL REFERENCE.—Sasaki, 1915:144, fig. 4, pl. 4: figs. 7–13.

TYPE LOCALITY.—Sagami Bay, Japan.

DEPOSITION OF TYPES.—Holotype: Museum of the Science College, Tokyo Imperial University, Japan.

Paratypes: None designated.

DISTRIBUTION AND BIOLOGY.—This species is found across the North Pacific from about 20°N to 40°N. In the Southern Hemisphere it is found in all three major oceans at similar south latitudes (Figure 3), but records are not abundant in these areas (Zuev et al., 1975) due to less frequent sampling. It is considered to be a Transition Zone species (McGowan, 1971) by Wormuth (1976).

As is the case for most ommastrephids, little is known of its depth distribution. It occurs with Ommastrephes bartramii but is seen less frequently. This may be because of actual lower abundance or because it rarely approaches the surface. Little is known of its prey species or its reproductive behavior.

Males and females from waters off the east coast of Australia mature at between 120 mm ML and 130 mm ML (Dunning and Brandt, 1985). The broad size range encountered suggests a protracted spawning season.
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citação bibliográfica
Voss, N. A. and Sweeney, M. J. 1998. "Systematics and Biogeography of cephalopods. Volume II." Smithsonian Contributions to Zoology. 277-599. https://doi.org/10.5479/si.00810282.586.277

Comprehensive Description ( Inglês )

fornecido por Smithsonian Contributions to Zoology
Eucleoteuthis luminosa (Sasaki, 1915)

The striped squid or luminous flying squid, E. luminosa, has a distribution similar to that of O. bartramii, occurring in subtropical waters of the North and South Pacific but restricted to south of the equator in the Indian and Atlantic oceans (Zuev et al., 1975; Okutani, 1980). In the South Pacific, this species has previously been reported from around New Caledonia and Norfolk Island (Rancurel, 1970; Zuev et al., 1975) and eastward from the Kermadec Islands to 80°54′E off the coast of Chile (Wormuth, 1976; Polezhaev, 1986). Nesis (1979b) considered E. luminosa to be a peripheral species in the Australasian region.

Larval E. luminosa have been reported from off the eastern Australian coast between 14°30′S and 35°46′S, where sea surface temperatures (where recorded) ranged from 28° C to 20.6° C. Juveniles (<75 mm ML) were collected between 23°59′S and 37°45′S in water temperatures of 25.6° C to 19.1° C (Dunning, 1988c).

Nesis (1979c) reported larval and juvenile E. luminosa between 2 mm ML and 10 mm ML from a depth of 200 m near Norfolk Island; however, no specimens of this species were caught in towed plankton nets or surface scoop nets during summer Tasman Sea and southern Coral Sea surveys undertaken by Dunning (1988c).

Near the eastern Australian coast, adult E. luminosa have been caught between 23°59′S and 36°35′S (surface temperatures 25.6°–20.8° C). Single females also were jigged at two stations in the southeastern Coral Sea at 31°44′S, 164°58′E, and 30°03′S, 163°49′E, in late February 1982 and in the southwest Tasman Sea at 35°50′S, 156°38′E, in December 1982 (Dunning, 1988c). During January 1982, three specimens of E. luminosa were caught in midwater trawls where bottom depth exceeded 800 m. An additional 18 specimens trawled and jigged off the New South Wales coast were examined, and all were taken where water depth exceeded 600 m (Dunning, 1988c).
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citação bibliográfica
Voss, N. A. and Sweeney, M. J. 1998. "Systematics and Biogeography of cephalopods. Volume II." Smithsonian Contributions to Zoology. 277-599. https://doi.org/10.5479/si.00810282.586.277

Comprehensive Description ( Inglês )

fornecido por Smithsonian Contributions to Zoology
Symplectoteuthis luminosa Sasaki, 1915

Symplectoteuthis oualaniensis.—Watase, 1906, p. 195. Symplectoteuthis luminosa Sasaki, 1915, p.144, text fig. 4, pl.4, figs. 7–13; 1916, p.106; 1929, p.293, text fig. 140, pl.24, figs. 4–5.

Eucleoteuthis luminosa.—Berry, 1916, p.60.—Okada, 1927, p.4.

DESCRIPTION.—The mantle is long and slender (width 15–20% of length); anterior to the fins it is nearly cylindrical, but posteriorly it tapers to a point. The free margin is only slightly produced near the ventral locking-cartilages and not at all in the nuchal region. The mantle wall is extremely thick and muscular.

The fins are about 45–50% of the mantle in length and about 55–60% in total width. They are muscular and attenuate posteriorly. The fins extend to the posterior tip of the mantle. The anterior lobes are free.

The funnel is short and muscular. It is fused to the ventroposterior side of the head by a narrow muscular band extending forward anterior to the funnel locking-cartilage. The funnel locking-cartilage has an inverted T-shaped groove which is fused with the mantle locking-cartilage in the posterior portion of the longitudinal groove. The dorsal pad of the funnel organ has an inverted V-shape with only a slight trace of an anterior papilla. The lateral arms are very long and extend onto the funnel retractor muscles. The ventral pads are rather slender and extremely elongate. The anterior and posterior extent of the ventral and dorsal pads coincides. A large funnel valve is present.

The head is approximately the same diameter as the mantle. The eyes are large and occupy almost the entire lateral sides of the head. A large anterior sinus is present on each eyelid, and there is a small “window” in the skin above and below each eye. A nuchal crest bears 4 folds which are connected posteriorly. An oblique ridge, the “olfactory” organ, lies on the posterior extension of the second fold from the funnel. A distinct funnel groove is present. The foveola has 8 low ridges on its anterior wall. Only a single, small, side pocket can be found on each side of the foveola. The nuchal cartilage broadens at the anterior end and has a median ridge with a central groove.

The arms are short (30–40% of the M.L.) and in the order 2=3=4>1. Arms I–III all have well-developed aboral keels. An additional keel is present along the lateral side of each arm I. Large lateral keels are present on arms IV.

Trabeculate protective membranes are well developed on all arms. On arms I–III, the membranes on the ventral margins are broader than on the dorsal margins. These are most fully developed on arms III where they are wider than the greatest width of the aboral keel of the same arm. The long, slender, supporting trabeculae extend to the margin of the membrane. The trabeculate membranes of arms IV are equally developed on both margins.

The suckers of the arms are biserially arranged and total 43–48 on each of arms I–III and 56–58 on arms IV. The basal few suckers on each arm generally have 3–5 broad, truncate teeth on the upper margin of the chitinous ring and a smooth lower margin. Each broad tooth is the homologue of 2 pointed teeth on the more distal suckers. At rows 5 and 6 on the arms, the teeth have approximately 9–12 sharply pointed teeth on the distal margin that merge with 1–3 broad, generally truncate, teeth on each lateral margin; the proximal margin is smooth. The teeth are more or less of a uniform size, except for an occasional small tooth situated near a larger tooth, although more frequently these are fused, forming a single, somewhat lopsided tooth. The number of teeth is somewhat irregular; some of the large suckers of arms II may have small broadly spaced teeth on the proximal half of the sucker ring. This appears to be a variable feature. Suckers of the seventeenth and eighteenth rows each have 5–6 long pointed teeth on the distal half of their inner rings. The largest suckers of arms IV are roughly half the diameter of the largest suckers of arms II. The largest suckers of arms I and III are only slightly smaller than those of arms II.

The tentacles are short and muscular.. An aboral keel extends the full length of the tentacular stalk and onto the club where it is continuous with the dorsoaboral keel of the dactylus. The clubs are only slightly expanded and bear roughly 115–123 suckers. The suckers of the manus are arranged in 4 longitudinal rows except at the proximal end where the number of suckers rapidly diminishes to a few irregularly arranged suckers that extend onto the tentacular stalk. There are no carpal suckers although a single carpal knob was found near the base of the manus close to the dorsal border of both clubs in one specimen, but not in the other. The suckers in the 2 median rows on the manus are greatly enlarged, the largest being 2½ to 3 times the diameter of the marginal suckers. These suckers each bear a single enlarged tooth on the distal margin of the sucker ring. The remaining margin has low jagged edges which form teeth lacking a regular pattern or shape. The dentition becomes more regular on the smaller suckers. The marginal suckers bear about 30–35 teeth around the entire circumference of the chitinous ring. The teeth of the distal margin are slender, pointed, and roughly alternate between long and short sizes. The teeth on the proximal margin are all short and uniform. The dactylus has 4 longitudinal rows of suckers which are continuous with those of the manus. The suckers grade in size in a transverse series from the largest in the ventral row to the smallest in the dorsal row. The sucker dentition is the same as in the marginal suckers of the manus, although the number of teeth decreases as the size of the suckers diminishes near the tip of the dactylus. There is a small pad of about 7–8 smooth ringed suckers at the tip of the dactylus.

The buccal membrane has 7 lappets. The buccal connectives attach to the dorsal borders of arms I, II, IV, and to the ventral borders of arms III.

This species has a very distinctive photophore pattern. Two broad luminous strips extend almost the full length of the mantle on either side of the ventral midline. Each strip consists of 3 separate parts: a small anterior segment is situated at the free margin of the mantle; a short gap separates this from the second part which extends to approximately the level of the lateral angles of the fins; and this is barely separated from the third portion which continues to approximately the level of the conus of the pen. Near the anterior edge of the mantle are two small patches, one situated on either side of the ventral midline, but medial to the anterior portion of the long strips. Also near the anterior margin, but lateral to each of the long strips, is a medium-size photophore. There is a large photophore on the ventral surface of the head at the base of each arm IV, and another is located on midventral surface of each arm IV.

Many small photophores, generally invisible without dissection, are scattered over the mantle, funnel, head, and arms. These form almost a complete line along the anterodorsal margin of the mantle. They are scattered irregularly over the ventral surface of the mantle, but are absent from its dorsolateral surface. They are scattered along the dorsal midline from the anterior mantle margin to the fins. The inner surface of the funnel has a single photophore on each dorsolateral side at approximately the level of the emergence of the cephalic vein. There is a photophore at the funnel attachment of each of the 2 bridles and 2 small photophores are imbedded in the funnel valve. On the head, a few photophores are scattered lateral to the base of the funnel. I have found only a single photophore in the integument immediately in front of the foveola; however, since most of the tissue there has been torn away, it is quite likely that at least several others are present in intact specimens. A small distinct photophore is present at the medial base of each ventral arm very near the point where the arms unite. A line of irregularly shaped photophores extends along the lateral edge of each ventral arm at the base of the keel in the proximal half of the arm. There is also a series of small photophores along the surface of the axial nerve of each tentacle.

There can be no assurance that all photophores have been located, since they are extremely difficult to see. For example, Okada (1927) in a histological examination found photophores in the fins, but I have not been able to find them by gross dissection.

The larger specimen examined is a gravid female with greatly enlarged nidamental glands. The mature eggs measure just under 1 mm.

The animal is covered with numerous, small, reddish brown chromatophores. The dorsal surface is darker than the ventral surface, and the lateral sides of the animal have a distinct silvery appearance.

TYPE LOCALITY.—Off Misaki, Japan.

LOCATION OF TYPE.—In Tokyo Imperial University.
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citação bibliográfica
Young, Richard E. 1972. "The systematics and areal distribution of pelagic cephalopods from the seas off Southern California." Smithsonian Contributions to Zoology. 1-159. https://doi.org/10.5479/si.00810282.97

Striped flying squid ( Inglês )

fornecido por wikipedia EN

Eucleoteuthis is a monotypic genus of squid from the family Ommastrephidae; the only species is Eucleoteuthis luminosa, the striped flying squid or luminous flying squid.

Description

The striped flying squid is a very distinctive species which has two long, yellowish[3] luminous stripes on the underside of its mantle surface and a fused apparatus for locking the funnel to the mantle. It grows to a mantle length of roughly 220 mm[4] and the maximum mantle length recorded in males is 207 mm while the females are slightly longer at 227 mm.[3] Its fourth left arm is hectocotylized and has 19–22 suckers in two series in its basal two-thirds where there is a weak protective membrane and there are two pointed knobs rather than suckers on its tip where the ventral protective membrane is more developed than that on the dorsal side. The largest suckers on the tentacular clubs have either a smooth margin or a single large tooth. The smaller suckers may have more teeth. The apparatus for locking the funnel organ to the mantel is forked towards the front and is fused to the rear, but only in individuals who have a mantle length over 9 mm. There are small subcutaneous photophores on the underside of mantle, head and of the third and fourth arms, while the fourth arms have a large oval photophore at their bases and another hallway to their tips. The ventral surface of mantle has two stripes of luminous tissue extending along almost its entire length with two large, oval-shaped luminous patches at the end of each mantle strip closest to the head.[5] The fins are heart-shaped and taper to a point.[6] The larvae have dispersed large brown chromatophores while in the juveniles these are crimson and brown.[6]

The species is bioluminescent.[7]

Distribution

The striped flying squid is distributed in the southern oceans and in the North Pacific Ocean but it is absent from the North Atlantic Ocean. In the southern South Pacific it is occurs between 20°S and 35°S in the west and it is found from 13°S to 43°S in the east; in the southern Indian Ocean it occurs north to 15°S and south to 34°S and in the southern South Atlantic Ocean between 10°S and 36°S. In the North Pacific Ocean it occurs from the southern Kuril Islands to western North America as far south as Mexico, between 10°N to 40°N.[3]

Habitat and biology

The striped flying squid is found in the epipelagic and upper mesopelagic zones, occurring from near the surface to a depth of 400 m. It lives in open waters mostly over depths of over 200 metres (660 ft), and it appears to be nektonic rather than benthic. Subadults and adults have been recorded at the surface at night, but only rarely. They spend the day at depths greater than 50 to 100 metres (330 ft). They are low to moderately abundant; they are most numerous in the South Pacific Ocean between 30°S and 40°S. Males reach maturity at 95 to 185 mm mantle length, normally at age 180 to 270 days, and females mature at 102 to 200 mm mantle length when they are aged 220 to 240 days. This varies widely over the squid's range and they grow larger at lower latitudes. The maximum life span is one year. In the lower latitudes they spawn throughout the year but in the higher latitudes it is restricted to the spring and summer. The male's spermatophores are 11.2 to 15.8 mm in length, in the Needham's sac of mature males there may be up to 150 of them although more usually between 70 and 100 are present. The egg size is 0.8 to 1.0 mm, and each female may have between 300,000 and 625,000 ova, with the oviducts of mature females holding about 17 000 ripe eggs, probably more.[3]

References

  1. ^ Barratt, I.; Allcock, L. (2014). "Eucleoteuthis luminosa". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2014: e.T162926A954040. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2014-1.RLTS.T162926A954040.en. Retrieved 20 November 2021.
  2. ^ Julian Finn (2016). "Eucleoteuthis luminosa Sasaki, 1915". World Register of Marine Species. Flanders Marine Institute. Retrieved 9 March 2018.
  3. ^ a b c d P. Jereb; C.F.E. Roper, eds. (2010). Cephalopods of the World an Annotated and Illustrated Catalogue of Cephalopod Species Known to Date Volume 2 Myopsid and Oegopsid Squids (PDF). Food and Agriculture Organization Rome. p. 305. ISBN 978-92-5-106720-8.
  4. ^ "Luminous Flying Squid – Eucleoteuthis luminosa Sasaki, 1915". Australian Museum. Retrieved 10 March 2010.
  5. ^ Young, Richard E. & Michael Vecchione (2009). "Eucleoteuthis Berry 1916. Eucleoteuthis luminosa (Sasaki 1915). Version 29 November 2009 (under construction)". The Tree of Life Web Project.
  6. ^ a b D. Boltovskoy (ed.). "Eucleoteuthis luminosa Marine Species Identification Portal". Zooplankton of the South Atlantic Ocean. ETI Bioinformatics. Retrieved 10 March 2018.
  7. ^ Herring, Peter J. (1987). "Systematic distribution of bioluminescence in living organisms". Journal of Bioluminescence and Chemiluminescence. 1 (3): 147–163. doi:10.1002/bio.1170010303. PMID 3503524.
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Striped flying squid: Brief Summary ( Inglês )

fornecido por wikipedia EN

Eucleoteuthis is a monotypic genus of squid from the family Ommastrephidae; the only species is Eucleoteuthis luminosa, the striped flying squid or luminous flying squid.

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Eucleoteuthis luminosa ( Neerlandês; Flamengo )

fornecido por wikipedia NL

Eucleoteuthis luminosa is een soort in de taxonomische indeling van de inktvissen, een klasse dieren die tot de stam der weekdieren (Mollusca) behoort. De inktvis komt enkel in zout water voor en is in staat om van kleur te veranderen. Hij beweegt zich voort door water in zijn mantel te pompen en het er via de sifon weer krachtig uit te persen. De inktvis is een carnivoor en zijn voedsel bestaat voornamelijk uit vis, krabben, kreeften en weekdieren die ze met de zuignappen op hun grijparmen vangen.

De inktvis komt uit het geslacht Eucleoteuthis en behoort tot de familie Ommastrephidae. Eucleoteuthis luminosa werd in 1915 beschreven door Sasaki.[1]

Bronnen, noten en/of referenties
  1. World Register of Marine Species, Eucleoteuthis luminosa. Marinespecies.org. Geraadpleegd op 3 oktober 2011.
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發光柔魚 ( Chinês )

fornecido por wikipedia 中文维基百科
二名法 Eucleoteuthis luminosa
Sasaki, 1915

發光柔魚学名Eucleoteuthis luminosa),又名發光魷魚,为柔魚科發光柔魚屬下的一个种。

参考文献

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發光柔魚: Brief Summary ( Chinês )

fornecido por wikipedia 中文维基百科

發光柔魚(学名:Eucleoteuthis luminosa),又名發光魷魚,为柔魚科發光柔魚屬下的一个种。

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Habitat ( Inglês )

fornecido por World Register of Marine Species
oceanic, epi- to mesopelagic

Referência

van der Land, J. (ed). (2008). UNESCO-IOC Register of Marine Organisms (URMO).

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Habitat ( Inglês )

fornecido por World Register of Marine Species
Known from seamounts and knolls

Referência

Stocks, K. 2009. Seamounts Online: an online information system for seamount biology. Version 2009-1. World Wide Web electronic publication.

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[email]