Onychoteuthidae (original) (raw)

Onychoteuthidae

Hooked squids

K.S.R. Bolstad, Michael Vecchione, and Richard E. Young

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The family Onychoteuthidae was recently revised by Bolstad (2010), who recognized the following seven genera (with about 25 species).

Introduction

Onychoteuthids are small (ca. 7 cm ML) to large (ca. 2 m ML), muscular squids that have two series of smooth-ringed suckers on the arms and two series of hooks on the tentacular clubs (and, rarely, marginal suckers as well). Some species are common open ocean squids (e.g., Onychoteuthis spp.); others live near the ocean floor along continental or island slopes (bathyal region) (e.g., Onykia spp.).

Brief diagnosis:

An oegopsid ...

Characteristics

  1. Arms
    1. Arm suckers biserial with smooth rings.
    2. Hectocotylization absent.
  2. Tentacles
    1. Tentacular club with two medial series of hooks; ventromedial series with larger hooks.
    2. Marginal club suckers absent by subadult stages of most genera.
    3. Club suckers generally limited to carpal locking-apparatus and terminal pad in subadults, although a dactylus is present in Notonykia and possibly Kondakovia.
    4. Carpal locking apparatus with circular to oval shape that is usually defined by a ridge or elevation.
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      Figure. Oral view of the tentacle club of Onychoteuthis borealijaponica, 81 mm ML, off California. Drawing from Young (1972).
  3. Buccal crown
    1. Buccal connectives attach to ventral sides of Arms IV.
  4. Head
    1. Head with three primary (ventro-lateral) occipital folds in all genera; 3-8 secondary occipital folds also present in some genera (Onychoteuthis, Ancistroteuthis, Notonykia).
    2. Beaks
      1. Lower beak with a step following jaw angle.
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        Figure. Anterior-oblique views of the lower beak. Arrows point to the step of both beaks. Left - Notonykia africanae, 100 mm ML, paratype. Modified from Nesis, et al., 1998. Right - Walvisteuthis virilis, mature male, NMNH specimen. The step ("angle ridge") lies just beyond the jaw angle where the rostral edge continues medially onto the lateral wall. That is, where the rostral edge merges into the lateral wall, the two are not flush along the medial beak surface. A well defined step is a characteristic feature of the lower beak of all members of the Onychoteuthidae. Such a step is seen outside the family only in Pholidoteuthis boschmai and to a lesser extent in some Enoploteuthis (Clarke, personal communication). Photograph by R. Young.
  5. Funnel
    1. Funnel locking-apparatus with straight groove.
  6. Photophores
    1. Photophores present only in Onychoteuthis and possibly Ancistroteuthis.
  7. Gladius
    1. Gladius with primary conus.
    2. Gladius with rostrum, usually prominent.

Comments

The following table compares the major features that separate the genera (modified from Bolstad 2010).

Genus Photophores Secondary occipital folds Structure of mantle epidermis Fins Marginal suckers on manus Terminal pad suckers Rachidian
Onychoteuthis Two intestinal*, one or two on each eye Six to ten Smooth Rhombic Absent at maturity 9–18 Variably unicuspid or tricuspid
Onykia Absent Absent With warts* or longitudinal ridges Rhombic to sagittate Absent at maturity 9–18 Tricuspid
Ancistroteuthis Absent1 Six or seven Smooth Rhombic to sagittate Absent at maturity 15–19 Tricuspid
Kondakovia Absent Absent Longitudinally ridged or reticulate* Heart-shaped* or rhombic Full series present at maturity* 30–36 Unicuspid to weakly tricuspid
Notonykia Absent Three* Smooth Rhombic One or two may remain distally at maturity 17–25 (dactylus) + 11–14 (terminal pad) Unicuspid
Filippovia Absent Absent Smooth Rhombic Absent at maturity 13–17 Unicuspid
Callimachus Absent Absent Smooth Ovate or paddle-shaped in adults* Proximal partial series present at maturity* 8–11 Tricuspid

1 - Absent from mantle cavity; may be present on ventral surface of eye (nature of tissue undetermined)

* - indicates unique character within family

The following drawings illustrate the characters used in the table above.

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Top row:

Bottom row:

Discussion of Phylogenetic Relationships

(Modified from Bolstad [2010]): Several studies have addressed genetic relationships within the Onychoteuthidae. Bonnaud et al. (1998) analysed 16S rRNA sequences from eight onychoteuthid species (from four genera). Notably, Callimachus youngorum (their ‘**Onykia** sp.’) appeared most closely related to the ‘**Moroteuthis**’ group—more closely related, in fact, than was F. knipovitchi, which until recently was also considered an Onykia species. Wakabayashi et al. (2007) conducted a similar study (using CO1) on nine onychoteuthid species from three genera. In their results, three Onykia species grouped closely together, with O. (M.) ingens slightly more distant; the Onycho­teuthis species also grouped together; and F. knipovitchi did not fall out with the Onykia species, but rather the Onychoteuthis group.

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Figure. Summary of previous genetic studies on the Onychoteuthidae. A: ‘Tree obtained after neighbor-joining analysis of 16S sequences,’ modified from Bonnaud et al. (1998), fig. 6. B: ‘NJ tree of standard species and paralarvae’ (based on CO1 sequences), modified from Wakabayashi et al. (2007), fig. 2. Species names have been updated; where applicable, original species ID appears in smaller font following updated name. © (2010), Wakabayashi et al. (2007), Bonnaud et al. (1998).

Nesis (2000) assessed relationships within the family based on morphology and zoogeography, discussing primitive/advanced character states and likely phylogeny. He considered dense, muscular tissues, smooth skin on the mantle, and the absence of photophores and secondary occipital folds all to be primitive states, with ammoniacal tissues, sculptured skin, secondary occipital folds, and photophores representing more advanced states. Nesis also discussed the presence of both ‘primitive’ and ‘advanced’ genera in every zoogeographical zone (although he considered Onykia primitive and ‘**Moroteuthis**’ advanced, separating them based on the presence or absence of ammonium chloride (a bouyancy device) and concluded that the family evolved in the tropics.

Distribution

The family is absent from the Arctic Ocean but, otherwise, is found throughout the world's oceans (Nesis 1982/87).

Other Names for Onychoteuthidae Gray, 1847

References

Arkhipkin, A. I. and Ch. M. Nigmatullin. 1997. Ecology of the oceanic squid Onychoteuthis banksi and the relationship between the genera Onychoteuthis and Chaunoteuthis (Cephalopoda: Onychoteuthidae. J. Mar. Biol. Ass. U. K. 77:839-869.

Bolstad, K.S.R. 2010. Systematics of the Onychoteuthidae Gray, 1847 (Cephalopoda: Oegopsida). Zootaxa, 9626: 186 pp.

Bonnaud, L., P. G. Rodhouse and R. Boucher-Rodoni. 1998. A phylogenetic study of the squid family Onychoteuthidae (Cephalopoda: Oegopsida). Proc. R. Soc. Lond. B 265:1761-1770.

Kubodera, T., U. Piakowski, T. Okutani and M. R. Clarke. 1998. Taxonomy and zoogeography of the family Onychoteuthidae. Smithson. Contr. to Zool., No. 586 (vol. II):277-291.

Nesis, K. N. 1982/87. Abridged key to the cephalopod mollusks of the world's ocean. 385,ii pp. Light and Food Industry Publishing House, Moscow. (In Russian.). Translated into English by B. S. Levitov, ed. by L. A. Burgess (1987), Cephalopods of the world. T. F. H. Publications, Neptune City, NJ, 351pp.

Nesis, K.N. 2000. Squids of the family Onychoteuthidae: phylogeny, biogeography, and way of life. Zoologichesky Zhurnal, 79(3):272-281.

Nesis, K. N. and I. V. Nikitina. 1986. A new family of deepsea squids (Cephalopoda, Oegopsida) from the Southeastern Atlantic. Zool. Zhurn. 65: 47-54.

Nesis, K. N. and I. V. Nikitina 1992. New records of oceanic squids Walvisteuthis virilis Nesis et Nikitina, 1986 and Nototeuthis dimegacotyle Nesis et Nikitina, 1986 (Cephalopoda, Oegopsida) from the South Atlantic and the South Pacific. Ruthenica 2: 55-58.

Nesis, K. N., M. A. C. Roeleveld and I. V. Nikitina. 1998. A new genus and species of onychoteuthid squid from the Southern Ocean. Ruthenica 8:153-168.

Tsuchiya, K. and T. Okutani. 1991. Growth stages of Moroteuthis robusta (Verrill, 1881). Bull. Mar. Sci. 49:137-147.

Wakabayashi, T., Kubodera, T., Sakai, M., Ichii, T. & Chow, S. 2007. Molecular evidence for synonymy in the genera Moroteuthis and Onykia and identification of their paralarvae from northern Hawaiian waters. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 87: 959�965.

Young, R. E. 1972. The systematics and areal distribution of pelagic cephalopods from the seas off Southern California. Smithson. Contr. Zool., 97: 1-159.

Title Illustrations

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Scientific Name Onychoteuthis
Reference Pfeffer, G. 1912. Die Cephalopoden der Plankton-Expedition. Zugleich eine monographische ubersicht der Oegopsiden Cephalopoden. Ergebnisse der Plankton-Expedition der Humboldt-stiftung, 2:1-815, 48 plates.
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About This Page

K.S.R. Bolstad
Auckland University of Technology


National Museum of Natural History, Washington, D. C. , USA


University of Hawaii, Honolulu, HI, USA

Correspondence regarding this page should be directed to K.S.R. Bolstad at

Page copyright © 2019 K.S.R. Bolstad, , , and M. Vecchione, and

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Citing this page:

Bolstad, K.S.R., Michael Vecchione, and Richard E. Young. 2019. Onychoteuthidae Gray, 1847. Hooked squids. Version 26 March 2019. http://tolweb.org/Onychoteuthidae/19419/2019.03.26 in The Tree of Life Web Project, http://tolweb.org/

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