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Damn Nature You Scary

This colossal squid is absolutely massive and slightly terrifying

It’s only the second time a colossal squid has been found intact.

colossal-squid-main YouTube / Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa YouTube / Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa / Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa

A TEAM OF scientists and researchers in New Zealand today dissected only the second intact specimen of a colossal squid hauled from the ocean.
The 350kg female was caught a couple of months ago in the Ross Sea off the coast of Antarctica by a team fishing for Patagonian toothfish.

Pulled from a depth somewhere between 1200m and 1800m, it weighed about 350kg and was 3.5m long from fin to tentacle.

The fisherman ceased operations immediately once they saw the beast, and slung a tarpaulin underneath it to preserve it as well as possible. It was donated to the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa and, until Monday, had been kept on ice.

Colossal squid are shorter than their legendary brethren, giant squid, but heavier. The largest known specimen of a colossal squid weighed about 500kg.

Scientists have known about their existence since 1925, but only from scraps found inside whales and sucker imprints on whale skin. It wasn’t until 2007 when the same vessel that hooked this specimen, the long-liner San Aspiring, caught the first live colossal squid, also in the Ross Sea.

colossal-squid-ross-sea YouTube / Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa YouTube / Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa / Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa

Since 2008, 4.5 million have seen that first squid on display in the Natural History Display at the Te Papa museum.

The dissection on Tuesday was carried out by museum staff with the Auckland University of Technology helping out. It began at 9.30 a.m. AEST and was broadcast live on YouTube for the next three and a half hours.

Here are the photo highlights:

Dr. Kat Bolstad led the dissection, starting with an examination of the tentacles.

colossal-squid-tentacle Businessinsider Businessinsider

The eye generated a lot of excitement on Twitter. It was more than foot across, the largest in the animal kingdom.

colossal-squid-eye Businessinsider Businessinsider

The beak took some removal, but it was well worth it.

colossal-squid-beak Businessinsider Businessinsider

The team grouped around the squid to give an idea of why it’s called “colossal.” The water is brown with ink, ruptured liver juice, blood and ammonium chloride, which the squid holds in a sac for buoyancy.

colossal-squid-body Businessinsider Businessinsider

One of the main differences between colossal squid and their relatives is the presence of hooks in their tentacles.

colossal-squid-hooks Businessinsider Businessinsider

It’s an incredible creature. You can watch the entire show here.

Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa / YouTube

Read: Fish-eating spiders exist, and here is horrifying proof

Read: Massive squadron of pelicans diving for fish is both fascinating and terrifying

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