Friday Cephalopod: Stubby


Claire O’Quin sent me this photo with a little story.

While taking a fish ecology and morphology class out at University of Washington’s Friday Harbor Labs, we came across this little Stubby squid, Rossia pacifica, while collecting one day. He soon became our mascot during the 5 week class. I know the picture isn’t that super, but he was a cool little guy and I thought you might like him too.

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How can you resist a sweet little story like that?

Comments

  1. Claire says

    There were always mysid shrimp in the tank with him since he was housed with some of our fishy friends and that is what they ate. No one ever actually ever witnessed Stubby eat, but he stayed alive the whole time, so I guess he had to eat something :)

  2. Lago says

    I know it is probably just my own imagination, but cephalopods always seem to be looking back at you, and wondering what you are up to. They almost seem suspicious of you, and contemplating what you plans might be.

    Anyone else get that?

  3. says

    Completely unrelated:

    I’m at the Wednesday night dinner at FUUN (First Unitarian Universalist — Nashville) and I’m talking to one of the girls sitting at the end of our table. She goes to St. Cecilia (http://www.stcecilia.edu/). She’s a fellow Unitarian (and an atheist Unitarian, like my family).

    THEY MAKE HER TAKE COMMUNION EVERY DAY! INCLUDING THE EUCHARIST. NO EXCEPTIONS.

    I almost fell out of my chair.

    Anyway, I’d been waiting for a cracker thread or something in which to post it. But there was a shooting yesterday at a Knoxville HS where one of our family friend’s child goes. She’s fine, and was outside when it happened, so I was dealing with all that upset yesterday instead of coming here and condemning the Catholic hypocrisy over “respect our beliefs” when they clearly don’t respect the beliefs of others.

  4. says

    Posted by: Lago | August 22, 2008 7:46 AM

    I know it is probably just my own imagination, but cephalopods always seem to be looking back at you, and wondering what you are up to. They almost seem suspicious of you, and contemplating what you plans might be.

    Anyone else get that?

    Yes. Because they understand that they are predators and prey. Something that many humans don’t understand until the shark bites them… Or the mountain lion gets them…

    I tell my child all the time, when you’re in the woods or ocean, you’re not the top predator. There are things that’ll eat you. Disney movies to the contrary.

  5. True Bob says

    Sorry, Charlie, we don’t want cephalopods with good taste…we want cephalopods that taste good!

  6. Mike B says

    I wonder if he would make a good pet he’s super cute.

    I also did the poll btw. God appears to be winning there and we can’t have that.

  7. Mustafa Mond, FCD says

    Cthulhu is opening today in select theaters. I’m not expecting too much because the cast includes Tori Spelling and several people I’ve never heard of.

  8. GirBoBytons says

    Aww thats adorable! I wanna kepp him! #11-Didnt we already do that poll or is it a different with the same badly worded question?

  9. KillerChihuahua says

    I did the poll.

    That is the cutest little squid! what was his eventual fate (or do I want to know?)

  10. mdowe says

    There isn’t much in the picture to gauge the squid’s size. I’m guessing it is on the small side?

  11. Claire says

    #16-He was left in the loving hands of the incoming invertebrate class.
    #18-He was small, he fit in the palm of your hand, which just makes him even cuter!!

    And, another fact about Stubby, he is actually more closely related to cuttlefish.

  12. madder says

    @Mustafa Mond #14

    Ah, yes. Finally, Ms. Spelling gets her big break as the title character.

  13. roddg1 says

    “And, another fact about Stubby, he is actually more closely related to cuttlefish.”

    Cuttlefish? Needs to be a rhyme in there somewhere.

  14. Bacopa says

    Alas, squid do not do well in aquaria. They bang into the glass and need near perfect water conditions. Small cephalopods live fast and die young anyway.

    M main interest in squids is in eating them. There’s a local squid that makes great calamari. Japanese restaurants serve some kind of slab-like squid meat that must have come from a pretty big squid. Weirdest squid I ever ate was at a Filipino diner next to where I used to work. I ordered the Squid platter to go and walked back to the breakroom. The dish had whole little fried squids in it about two inches long. I ate thtem and they were delicious. My co-workers left the room.

  15. Nick says

    That’s almost exactly what happened during a marine ecology class of my own at the Bamfield marine station, a ways north on Vancouver Island. We found the little fella in some seafloor samples we were taking, and managed to rescue him on the sorting table. He was a lab favourite for the rest of the semester, and actually did pretty well in his tank. Fortunately, the labs at Bamfield are supplied with the very same seawater that the little dude would have been swimming around in anyway.

  16. Sticklematt says

    I wake up today, and there’s our class’s mascot sitting on Pharyngula. Awesome!

    If he had been free-swimming instead of a benthic species, it would have been a lot harder to take care of him properly, but he seemed pretty content to sit on the bottom and glare hatefully at us, tentacles tucked neatly under his body.

  17. Kelly W says

    I was in the FHL Inverts class…we kept him for a few weeks in our lab. Once we finished learning about mollusks, I helped release him off the docks. Hopefully he’s doing well!

    We caught a few tiny Rossia while night-lighting off the docks, but they didn’t survive long in the lab.

  18. Paul A. says

    He reminds me of the way the Martians in HG Wells’ War of the Worlds are sometime portrayed.

  19. Claire says

    Kelly W, I’m so glad to hear that he was not only useful for your class, but was also returned to the ocean alive and well!!!