Argonauts float!

Argonauts are odd animals. They rather resemble a nautilus, but they aren't particularly closely related to them; their closest cephalopod relatives are the octopuses. Females have a thin shell and scoot about in the water column, but the poor males are all dwarfs, rarely seen, with no shell.

What is the shell for? It seems to be a chamber for holding a bubble of air that the animals use to maintain neutral buoyancy. I'm a little surprised that this was a surprise, though — the analogy to the chambered nautilus is obvious, and all the photos and videos I've seen of them suspended in midwater suggested that they were maintaining neutral buoyancy somehow.

More like this

Image of female Argonaut. Photo from Cabrillo Marine Aquarium, taken by Gary Florin. Photo by: Brittany Murray / Staff Photographer Daily Breeze   A rarely seen species of octopus was found this week by fisherman off the coast of San Pedro, California. The baseball-sized female Argonaut (aka:…
That's not hyperbole. I really mean it. How else could I react when I open up the latest issue of Bioessays, and see this: Cephalopod origin and evolution: A congruent picture emerging from fossils, development and molecules. Just from the title alone, I'm immediately launched into my happy place:…
If for no other reason, I love the American Museum of Natural History because it contains a web of seemingly endless nooks and crannies to explore. One, just far enough away from the main exhibit halls to go unnoticed by most visitors (it is not even denoted on the museum map anymore), is a…
We're all familiar with Pavlov's conditioning experiments with dogs. Dogs were treated to an unconditioned stimulus — something to which they would normally respond with a specific behavior, in this case, meat juice which would cause them to drool. Then they were simultaneously exposed to the…

That's an Argonaut? Ray Harryhausen lied to me!

Males are obviously less inclined to stuff themselves up with balloons.

Here is another video http://tinyurl.com/3ae957o that explains the new discovery and shows their shell even clearer. These are really amazing animals. I have actually spent the last several hours finding out everything that I could about them.

One funny fact I learned was that researchers originally thought that the male hectocotylus (the arm of the male argonaut that includes his penis) was a parasitic worm when they found it inside the females.

By godlesswoman (not verified) on 19 May 2010 #permalink

That is incredibly cute.

Does anyone know what the "black dot" between the eyes (where the two "crests" meet) is? Interesting creature.

Maybe it was just the general look of the beastie (and I know it's a depressing level of personification), but I could almost hear a little voice saying "Let go of me!" during the first segment of the film.

Super cute.

Wow. They are beautiful.

By nigelTheBold (not verified) on 19 May 2010 #permalink

Nature is so weird, but so beautiful.

What a cool little creature! Truth remains stranger than fiction - unless the ficion is religion, of course.

We all float down here.

By Acronym Jim (not verified) on 19 May 2010 #permalink

[/Pennywise]

Darned fake tag fail.

By Acronym Jim (not verified) on 19 May 2010 #permalink

The first I ever heard of these critters was from Jules Vern's 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea,, where they float on the surface and use their paddle-like arms as sails...
Yeah, Vern didn't get much of his biology right.

Does anyone know what the "black dot" between the eyes (where the two "crests" meet) is?

Its the argonaut's mouth. You can see the siphon just below it. The "crests" are the two modified arms that secrete the shell.

By davegodfrey (not verified) on 19 May 2010 #permalink

@ #5 gre
It appears the be the mouth. I could be wrong, but if it's an octopus then that black spot is right where the mouth would go.

By Matthew Gill (not verified) on 19 May 2010 #permalink

Does this really prove that the *primary* role of the shell is holding air? It still might be mainly an eggcase, and the animal just collects air to balance the additional weight of the shell itself, i.e. something which she neither needed nor could do without a shell.

Ralf Muschall

By https://www.go… (not verified) on 19 May 2010 #permalink

The argonaut is, in fact, a species of octopus, and that shell is partially an egg case (it is only found in a female argonaut)!

This is one reason why the shell was thought not to be for buoyancy.

The other is that they hadn't been observed alive till recently.

Jules Vern

Verne.

By David Marjanović (not verified) on 20 May 2010 #permalink