Article 5QQ4Z OceanXplorer ROV Captures Sight of Massive Squid Exploring a Shipwreck at the Bottom of Red Sea

OceanXplorer ROV Captures Sight of Massive Squid Exploring a Shipwreck at the Bottom of Red Sea

by
Lori Dorn
from Laughing Squid on (#5QQ4Z)
Purpleback-Flying-Squid-.jpg?w=750

While exploring the remains of a 2011 shipwreck on the floor of the Northern Red Sea during their maiden voyage, the team aboard the OceanXplorer glimpsed an odd anomaly on their radar. Unsure of the nature of this peculiar reading, they sent out the onboard ROV to explore. What they discovered was a massive squid of some sort weaving in and out of the wreckage.

About a year after the mission, they took the footage to Dr. Michael Vecchione, Curator of Cephalopoda at NOAA, who determined that the large squid in question was a Sthenoteuthis oualaniensis (purple back flying squid) rather than the Architeuthis (giant squid) the team first thought it was.

Purpleback flying squid. Sthenoteuthis oualaniensis. In the area that you're operating, in the Red Sea, there's a well known population of those. ...I think what you're seeing is what's called the giant form of Sthenoteuthis. ... the fin size, the proportions of the fin relative to the body, show me that it's not a giant squid. If you stop it right there, you see it's got fins that are short and broad and sort of thicken together. They look sort of like an arrowhead. I know that you probably wanted to think that you had some video of giant squids, but I can tell you that I'm absolutely certain it's not an Architeuthis dux.

Nonetheless, the unexpected discovery of such a massive cephalopod was thrilling to all aboard.

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The post OceanXplorer ROV Captures Sight of Massive Squid Exploring a Shipwreck at the Bottom of Red Sea first appeared on Laughing Squid.

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