‘Like a bolt of lightning piercing black clouds, this small common squid exploded on to the scene before me. Falmouth, UK.’
Photograph: Aaron Sanders
Ocean Photographer of the Year
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‘Like a bolt of lightning piercing black clouds, this small common squid exploded on to the scene before me. Falmouth, UK.’
Photograph: Aaron Sanders
Ocean Photographer of the Year

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Tentacool and Tentacruel
(As will probably become apparent by the lack of information, I’m not as knowledgeable on Common Squid as I am on most of the other creatures on this blog. So apologies for that.)
The Common, or European Squid can be found right across the UK’s coasts. Along with the two long tentacles they use to catch their prey, they have eight smaller arms gathered around their beak. If the squid is male, then one of these arms is called a hectocotylus, meaning it’s specially adapted to transfer sperm cells over to female squid. If she’s been fertilised successfully, the female squid will then go on to lay long white tubes of eggs that she sticks to solid objects on the sea floor. In total she can lay up to 20,000 eggs at once.