How strong are colossal squids tentacles.

221extra

Cuttlefish
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Im just wondering if the colossal squid has strong tentacles and a colossals main food source is pagantonian toothfish Also can a colossal squid predate like on a small shark or does it just stick to pagaontian toothfish.
 
221extra;107881 said:
Im just wondering if the colossal squid has strong tentacles and a colossals main food source is pagantonian toothfish Also can a colossal squid predate like on a small shark or does it just stick to pagaontian toothfish.

:welcome: to TONMO

I'll be curious if Steve and Kat have any insights here, but I'm pretty sure any answers will be speculation (unless there were some gut contents I've forgotten.) However, extrapolating up from more reasonable-sized squids, Mesonychoteuthis tentacles are probable quite quite good at holding large fish and pulling them in. They have shorter, thicker tentacles than Architeuthis and their hooks are clearly well-suited to keeping a grip on large prey animals, so it seems like a safe bet that they would immobilize a large fish like a toothfish with a tentacle strike and be strong enough to pull it into the arms for lunch... but I doubt you'll find any volunteers to put on a dry-suit and dive in the Ross Sea to find a huge squid to have a tug-of-war with to get a solid answer... (although Steve has been on a kick of proposing, er, exciting new projects for his students!)

Also extrapolating from smaller squids, I'd bet that it would eat any fish between a tenth and half (conservatively) of its own size, and I doubt it would turn down a shark, and few sharks are big enough that I think an adult colossal squid would be intimidated by them.
 
Please note, that the pacific sleeper shark (Somniosus pacificus) feeds on Mesonychoteuthis. It is not known whether this is through active predation or scavenging behaviour...

Mesonychoteuthis' tentacles are very muscular indeed, just look at this well known picture from Martin Collins of the South Georgia Island specimen :shock:
 
Thx for the pic and thx monty I like the forum.So a colossals tentacles are short and thick meaning they might have alot of strenght behind them
 
No one appears to be in disagreement with you there :wink:

The prey that M. hamiltoni grapples with is very powerful, so it needs the over the top armament.
 
They never retrieved the mantle, but judging on size, likely sub adult, possibly adult; we really don't know exactly how big they get...
 
monty;107885 said:
:
Also extrapolating from smaller squids, I'd bet that it would eat any fish between a tenth and half (conservatively) of its own size, and I doubt it would turn down a shark, and few sharks are big enough that I think an adult colossal squid would be intimidated by them.

So,it would seem that you are saying that most
"Predatory" squid would only make attempts on a
50 percent smaller shark at minimum.
-I'm not in disagreement(Though,what do I know).

But,it seems like the reverse is not true.
-By way of this example:
""The afternoon’s Mako, a sleek nearly-five-footer, had something I have never seen before, or even heard of: wounds from a Humboldt Squid. The Mako’s sides carried marks from rows of suckers, and slashes seemingly from the squid’s beak!"
"Last night we spent a couple of hours jigging for Humboldt Squid and caught two “small” ones that were the largest squid I’ve ever seen alive. Today, no fewer than three of the Makos we caught had squid sucker marks on them. Because the marks were concentrated on or around the head, it appears the sharks are attacking the squid and not vice versa.

We also caught one mako shark that looked as if it had been feeding on a Humboldt squid. It was covered with the repeated circular markings of the suction discs of the squid's tentacles. We first noticed these squid marks on mako sharks last year. Research at our lab at the Southwest Fisheries Science Center has shown that Humboldt squid are a common prey of mako sharks in this area"
.

And this too.
sharkfilesandpictures0004.jpg

sharkfilesandpictures0005.jpg



Though,hombolt squid also being opportunistic,will attack a (larger than themselves) shark if the conditions are right.

""During one night dive, a passenger aboard the ship hooked a 14-foot thresher shark, and the four photographers jumped in. As the photographers' flashes went off, they noticed dozens of other lights streaking around them in the water. One of the red and white streaks—a jumbo squid more than six feet long—flung itself onto the weary shark, ripping a fist-sized chunk of flesh from its head"

http://216.109.125.130/search/cache?ei=UTF...&icp=1&.intl=us.

So,my point is ?.....Actually I've no Point,lol.(I'm still trying to figure it all out).
 
I was trying to be conservative; certainly, some smaller cephs will kill animals larger than they are... the GPO vs Shark video that floats around shows an octopus taking down a shark that's bigger and heavier than it is. And humboldts hunt in packs, so that picture could easily be reversed in that case; the common belief seems to be that Architeuthis is pretty solitary, but as far as I know the only evidence that Colossal squids are not pack hunters is that they've only been seen going after the toothfish one at a time... certainly, many large carnivores become solitary just because of the need to spread out to get the food resources, but wolves, lions, and whales come to mind as large pack-hunting critters.

The link to 216.109... just gets a "yahoo search can't process your request" for me... does it show where that picture came from?
 
Concerning the link,I will fix it a little later,sorry about that.

Monty,I mean no disrespect,but to me,it looked like the GPO was much larger than the shark.Now,I'm a novice here concerning marine biology,so perhaps you can elaborate on..
1)Is indeed the shark larger than the GPO?

2)If so,then it must be that cephalopod weight/mass is difficult to predict from just looking at its diminsions.

3)Or.....Perhaps I may need glasses.

Again,I'm just a beginner here,so don't be offended by my "ignorant,but learning" questions.
 
scottwolverine1;108039 said:
Concerning the link,I will fix it a little later,sorry about that.

Monty,I mean no disrespect,but to me,it looked like the GPO was much larger than the shark.Now,I'm a novice here concerning marine biology,so perhaps you can elaborate on..
1)Is indeed the shark larger than the GPO?

2)If so,then it must be that cephalopod weight/mass is difficult to predict from just looking at its diminsions.

3)Or.....Perhaps I may need glasses.

Again,I'm just a beginner here,so don't be offended by my "ignorant,but learning" questions.

well, re-watching it I guess the shark is smaller than I remembered, but it's sort of hard to compare, since a shark is long, thin, and muscular, while an octo stretches and moves. It would be interesting to know which weighs more...

I have seen pictures of squids and cuttles attacking things that are about their size or slightly larger than they are, though, but they haven't been sharks, I guess. But I bet if you take the weight of the GPO and shark in the video, and compare the ratio, that (admittedly unjustified) approach would suggest that a 500kg Mesonychoteuthis could probably take on a pretty big shark, although I note that the wikipedia page for Great Whites says that they reach 2,250kg. So the biggest shark outweighs the biggest squid by quite a bit, and that's just 6 feet long, which at least makes it plausible that the squid outweighs the GPO in that video even if it's a bit smaller in length.

In a contest between a ceph and a shark of the same weight, I'd expect there's not a clear winner... if the ceph got a good grip on the shark, the shark doesn't have a lot of options, but if the shark took a big chomp out of the ceph, it could easily cause fatal damage... they're both very effective "first strike" predators.

Caveat emptor: I've read a lot about this stuff, but I'm wishing the real biologists would chime in, 'cause I am somewhat in "conjecture" territory here...
 
In my experience, he prefers payment in good cheer to outright bribery.... he appears to be rather busy lately, but may well pop in and comment on the subject.
 

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