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  2. Chambered nautilus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chambered_nautilus

    Because of their oceanic habitat, studies of their life cycle have primarily been based on captive animals and their eggs have never been seen in the wild. [7] Although nautilus have been kept at public aquariums since the 1950s, the chambered nautilus was first bred in captivity at the Waikiki Aquarium in 1995 (a couple of other nautilus species had been bred earlier) and captive breeding ...

  3. Nautilus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nautilus

    Nautiluses are much closer to the first cephalopods that appeared about 500 million years ago than the early modern cephalopods that appeared maybe 100 million years later (ammonoids and coleoids). They have a seemingly simple brain , not the large complex brains of octopus , cuttlefish and squid , and had long been assumed to lack intelligence.

  4. Cephalopod - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cephalopod

    Cephalopods are thought to be unable to live in fresh water due to multiple biochemical constraints, and in their >400 million year existence have never ventured into fully freshwater habitats. [10] Cephalopods occupy most of the depth of the ocean, from the abyssal plains to the sea surface, and have also been found in the hadal zone. [11]

  5. Nautiloid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nautiloid

    Interpretations by Engeser (1996–1998) suggests that nautiloids, and indeed cephalopods in general, should be split into two main clades: Palcephalopoda (including all the nautiloids except Orthocerida and Ascocerida) and Neocephalopoda (the rest of the cephalopods). Palcephalopoda is meant to correspond to groups which are closer to living ...

  6. Paralarva - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paralarva

    Paralarvae (sg.: paralarva) are young cephalopods in the planktonic stages between hatchling and subadult. This stage differs from the larval stage of animals that undergo true metamorphosis. [1] Paralarvae have been observed only in members of the orders Octopoda and Teuthida. [2] The term was introduced by Richard E. Young and Robert F ...

  7. Tusk shell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tusk_shell

    An alternative hypothesis proposes the cephalopods and gastropods as sister to the scaphopods with helcionellids as the stem group. [8] A review of deep molluscan phylogeny in 2014 found more support for the scaphopods, gastropods, or cephalopods than for scaphopods and bivalves, thus the shared body features of scaphopods and bivalves may be ...

  8. Teuthology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Teuthology

    Teuthology (from Greek τεῦθος, "cuttlefish, squid", and -λογία, -logia) [1] is the study of cephalopods, which are members of the class Cephalopoda in the phylum Mollusca. Some common examples of cephalopods are octopus, squid, and cuttlefish. Teuthology is a large area of study that covers cephalopod life cycles, reproduction ...

  9. Goniatite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goniatite

    Goniatids, informally goniatites, are ammonoid cephalopods that form the order Goniatitida, derived from the more primitive Agoniatitida during the Middle Devonian some 390 million years ago (around Eifelian stage).