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  2. Squid Diet and Mule Deer: This Week’s Reader Mail - AOL

    www.aol.com/squid-diet-mule-deer-week-062400034.html

    What Do Squid Eat? Their Diet Explained. Hi there, I’ve been creating a hand-drawn noir comic book called ‘Lobstertown Tales’ and I greatly appreciated your article on the squid diet as I ...

  3. Human interactions with molluscs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_interactions_with...

    Useful interactions with molluscs range from their use as food, where species as diverse as snails and squid are eaten in many countries, to the employment of molluscs as shell money and to make dyestuffs and musical instruments, for personal adornment with seashells, pearls, or mother-of-pearl, as items to be collected, as fictionalised sea ...

  4. Cranchiidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cranchiidae

    The family Cranchiidae comprises the approximately 60 species of glass squid, also known as cockatoo squid, cranchiid, cranch squid, or bathyscaphoid squid. [2] Cranchiid squid occur in surface and midwater depths of open oceans around the world. They range in mantle length from 10 cm (3.9 in) to over 3 m (9.8 ft), in the case of the colossal ...

  5. Cephalopod - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cephalopod

    Squids are the primary sufferers of negative buoyancy in cephalopods. The negative buoyancy means that some squids, especially those whose habitat depths are rather shallow, have to actively regulate their vertical positions. This means that they must expend energy, often through jetting or undulations, in order to maintain the same depth.

  6. The Strawberry Squid: A Deep Ocean Dweller with a Unique ...

    www.aol.com/strawberry-squid-deep-ocean-dweller...

    During the day the strawberry squid swims around in the twilight zone of the Atlantic Ocean in a range of about 660 to 3,300 feet below the surface. It can be found in tropical and subtropical waters.

  7. Caribbean reef squid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caribbean_reef_squid

    The Caribbean reef squid is the only squid species commonly sighted by divers over inshore reefs in the Florida, Bahamas and Caribbean regions. They are also found around Brazilian reef habitats, due to a symbiotic relationship in which the squid protect juvenile fish from open-ocean predators. [5]

  8. Bigfin reef squid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bigfin_reef_squid

    In comparison, other loliginid squid species do not produce complex body patterns at less than four months of age. The patterns produced by bigfin reef squids, however, are less diverse than those of the Caribbean reef squids. [31] Bigfin reef squids do not possess photophores, and are thus not truly bioluminescent. [26]

  9. Otter at St. Louis Aquarium's Cute Way of Waiting to Be Fed ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/otter-st-louis-aquariums...

    There are otters that do eat fish, however. Sea otters eat crabs, sea urchins, abalones, clams, mussels, snails, and slow-moving fish. Again, what an otter will eat depends on where they live or ...