Comments

  1. Doug says

    While researching these fine specimens (especially curious about the morphological implications of the title) I came across this sad fact:

    “Like other cephalopods, the Caribbean Reef Squid, is semelparous, dying after reproducing.”

    What a shame.

    (Of course most of you may have known this – but why didn’t anyone tell me!)

  2. The Mad Patriot says

    Like other cephalopods, the Caribbean Reef Squid, is semelparous, dying after reproducing.

    Yet another reason to stretch foreplay out as long as possible!

  3. says

    I knew that female cephalopods were semelparous, because they stop feeding around the time of breeding, and (my understanding is) they just starve to death as their offspring mature to the point they can survive. Pelagic squids might do it a little differently.

    Anyway, for benthic octopuses at least, I thought it was unknown how long males live, and whether they can mate multiple times over a period of, say, years.

  4. Robert Thille says

    Caucasian Jesus, are you kidding? This isn’t promiscuous at all, it’s for reproduction only, and hey, it has to be because it’s the only chance they get!
    If only we could convince teenagers that it was true for them as well, then we wouldn’t have to rely on scaring them with AIDS and denying them access to condoms and HPV vaccines!