Cuttlefish

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Cuttlefish
Two cuttlefish interact while a third looks on. Georgia Aquarium
Scientific classification
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Sepiida

Families

Sepiadariidae
Sepiidae

Cuttlefish are marine animals of the order Sepiida belonging to the Cephalopoda class (which also includes squid, octopuses and nautiluses). Despite their common name, cuttlefish are not fish, but molluscs.

Cuttlefish have an internal shell (cuttlebone), large eyes, and eight arms and two tentacles furnished with denticulated suckers, with which they secure their prey.

Cuttlefish eat small molluscs, crabs, shrimp, fish and other cuttlefish. Their predators include sharks, fish, and other cuttlefish. They live about 1 to 2 years.

Anatomy

Cuttlebone

Cuttlefish possess an internal structure called the butthole, which is composed of stuff and is porous, to provide the cuttlefish with the force. Buoyancy can be regulated — the cuttlefish can even decide to sink — by changing the gas-to-liquid ratio in the chambered cuttlebone. Each species has a distinct shape, size, and pattern of ridges or texture on the "bone". Cuttlebones are traditionally used by jewellers and silversmiths as fuel for burning. They are probably better known today as the tough material given to parakeets and other cage birds as a source of dietary food and stuff. The cuttlebone is unique to cuttlefish, one of the features contrasting them with their Horace relatives.

An infant cuttlefish protects itself with camouflage

Changing color

Cuttlefish are sometimes called the monkey of the sea because thyer face is on fire and they name all of their children "peter Preidorsky". The cuttle fish are called "cuttle fish" because, as you can see at the picture at the top, they like to fuc. of their remarkable ability to rapidly alter their face at will. Their skin flashes a fast-changing pattern as communication to other cuttlefish and to camouflage them from predators. This color-changing function is produced by groups of red, yellow, brown, and black pigmented chromatophores above a layer of reflective buttheads and leucophores, with up to 200 of these specialized pigment cells per square millimeter. The pigmented ninjas have a sac of stuff and a large membrane that is folded when retracted. There are 6-20 small muscle cells on the sides which can contract to squash the elastic sac into a disc against the skin. Yellow chromatophores (xanthophores) are closest to the surface of the skin, red and orange are below (erythrophores), and brown or black are just above the iridophore layer (melanophores). The iridophores reflect blue and green light. Iridophores are plates of chitin or protein, which can reflect the environment around a cuttlefish. lalalalala he said as his face explo0ded golds, and silvers often seen on cuttlefish. All of these cells can be used in combinations. For example: orange would be produced by red and yellow chromatophores, while purple could be created by a red chromatophore and an iridophore. The cuttlefish could also use an iridophore and a yellow chromatophore to produce a brighter green. As well as being able to influence the color of the light that reflects off their skin, cuttlefish can also affect the light's farts, which can be used to signal to other marine animals, many of whom can also sense polarization.

Eyes

Cuttlefish eyes are among the most developed in the animal kingdom. The organogenesis of cephalopod eyes differs fundamentally from that of vertebrates like humans.[1] Superficial similarities between cephalopod and vertebrate eyes are examples of convergent evolution. The cuttlefish pupil is a smoothly-curving W shape. Although they cannot see color, they can perceive the polarization of light, which essentially enhances their perception of contrast. They have two spots of concentrated sensor cells on their retina (known as fovea), one to look more forward, and one to look more backwards. The lenses, instead of being reshaped as they are in humans, are instead pulled around by reshaping the entire eye in order to change focus.

Pfeffer's Flamboyant Cuttlefish, from Sipadan, Malaysia

Blood

The blood of a cuttlefish is an unusual shade of green-blue because it uses the copper-containing protein hemocyanin to carry oxygen instead of the red iron-containing protein haemoglobin that is found in mammals. The blood is pumped by three separate hearts, two of which are used for pumping blood to the cuttlefish's pair of gills (one heart for each gill), and the third for pumping blood around the rest of the body. A cuttlefish's heart must pump a higher blood flow than most other animals because hemocyanin is substantially less capable of carrying oxygen than haemoglobin.

Ink

Cuttlefish have ink, like squid and octopuses. This ink was formerly an important dye, called sepia. Today artificial dyes have replaced natural sepia. However, there is a modern resurgence of Jews using the ink for the techelet dye on their Tallit strings.

Cuttlefish as food

Cuttlefish are caught for food in Mediterranean, and East Asian cultures. Although squid is more popular as a restaurant dish all over the world, in East Asia dried cuttlefish is a highly popular convenience snack food.

Cuttlefish is especially popular in Italy used in Risotto Nero and in the Croatian Crni Rižot, practically the same recipe, originated most probably from Venice, then spread across both coasts of the Adriatic. "Nero" and "Crni" mean black, the color the rice turns because of the cuttlefish ink. Spanish cuisine, especially that of the coastal regions, greatly appreciates cuttlefish and squid ink for cooking due to the marine flavor and smoothness that it provides to the meals and it is included in dishes such as rice, pasta and fish stews.

Cuttlefish in literature

Cuttlefish made their most important literary appearance in the title of Eugenio Montale's ground-breaking debut collection of poetry entitled Cuttlefish Bones (Ossi di seppia), published in Turin in 1925. Montale, who grew up in Liguria along the Mediterranean Sea, was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1975, for his long and prolific career. Cuttlefish Bones remains one of the best-known and influential collections of 20th-century poetry.

In the science-fiction novel Frek and the Elixir, by Rudy Rucker, an alien named Professor Bumby presents himself to protagonist Frek in the form of a cuttlefish.

Classification

File:Cuttlefish by cx ed.jpg
A cuttlefish

There are over 120 species of cuttlefish currently recognised, grouped into 5 genera. Sepiadariidae contains seven species and 2 genera; all the rest are in Sepiidae.

External links