Book Read Free

Kraken

Page 23

by Wendy Williams


  octopods

  Octopus dofleini. See giant Pacific octopus (GPO) (Octopus dofleini)

  Octopus Enrichment Notebook

  octopuses: anatomy

  arms

  autotomy and autophagy

  color-changing ability

  ctenoglossans

  defense mechanisms

  and evolution

  in fiction and folklore

  in films

  habitat, water-column

  intelligence

  neurons

  and personality

  predation

  prey puzzles

  propulsion and navigation

  reproduction

  resting behavior

  sensory system

  siphon

  and size

  skin color and texture changes

  solitary behavior

  suckers

  “tool use”

  octopus species: blue-ringed octopus

  mimic octopus

  Octopus wolfi

  Taningia danae

  two-spot octopus

  Vulcanoctopus hydrothermalis.

  See also giant Pacific octopus (GPO) (Octopus dofleini)

  Octopus wolfi

  octopus wrestling

  Ogasawara Islands (Japan)

  Ordovician period

  otoliths (organs)

  Owen, Richard

  oxygen: and circulatory system

  gills

  and ocean levels

  and water temperature

  Packard, A. S.

  Painlevé, Jean

  paper nautilus

  Papoulias, Bill

  Parkinson’s disease

  Pasteur, Louis

  Patton, Paul

  penicillin

  “pen” squid

  Pepperberg, Irene

  PETA (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals)

  pharmaceuticals. See medicines

  photophores

  Piccot, Theophilus

  Pieribone, Vincent

  Plectronoceras

  Plum Island, Massachusetts

  poison. See toxins

  Portugal

  predation: bioluminescence used for

  and evolution

  and food chain

  and intelligence

  prey puzzles

  Prince Edward Island mussels

  propulsion and steering: ability to “fly”

  and evolution

  mantle used for

  and octupuses

  Providence College

  pseudomorph

  Purdy, Jesse

  puzzles: cuttlefish maze

  prey puzzles

  Pynchon, Thomas

  radula

  Ramón y Cajal, Santiago

  rays, torpedo

  Rehling, Mark

  reproduction. See mating and reproduction

  respiration: and gills. See also oxygen

  resting behavior

  robotics

  Roeleveld, Martina

  Rollinson, Amy

  Romer, Alfred

  Roper, Clyde F.: Architeuthis research

  bitten by Humboldt squid

  on cephalopod intelligence

  on species terminology

  sperm whale expeditions

  on squid “counter-shading”

  Royal Society

  Ruby, Edward

  Ruderman, Joan

  Rush, Richard

  “Sammy” (GPO)

  Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History

  Sapolsky, Robert

  Schaik, Carel van

  Schlinger, Barney

  sea hare (Aplysia)

  Sea of Cortez

  Seattle Aquarium

  sea turtles

  sea urchins

  self-mutilation

  self-recognition studies

  sensory system

  chemoreceptors

  and intelligence

  smell receptors

  taste buds. See also eyesight

  “serendipitous” findings, in science

  sharks

  Shedd Aquarium

  Shelley, Mary

  shells, and evolution

  Shimomura, Osamu

  shrimp

  Shubin, Neil

  skin, and communication

  skin coloration. See color-changing ability

  smell receptors

  Smithsonian Institution

  Architeuthis specimen displayed in.

  See also Roper, Clyde F.

  snails

  social behavior, and intelligence

  “social learning”

  Southern Ocean

  Southwestern University (Texas)

  spermatophores

  sperm whales

  sponges

  squid: age-determination methods

  and aggression

  anatomy

  body translucence

  chromatophores

  circulatory system

  defense mechanisms

  and diet

  and evolution

  feeding tentacles

  fossil study

  habitat, water-column

  intelligence

  juvenile

  life span

  mating and reproduction

  medical research applications

  migration patterns

  nervous system

  and predation

  resting behavior

  sensory system

  shared human characteristics

  and size

  skin color and texture changes

  social behavior

  speed and mobility

  squid species: Asperoteuthis

  acanthoderma

  bathyscaphoid squid

  Caribbean reef squid

  Euprymna scolopes (Hawaiian bobtail squid)

  Heteroteuthis dispar

  Japanese flying squid

  Loligo opalescens

  long-armed squid

  Mesonychoteuthis hamiltoni (colossal squid)

  Moroteuthis robusta

  Taningia danae

  Vampyroteuthis infernalis

  See also giant squid (Kraken) (Architeuthis); Humboldt squid (Dosidicus gigas); Loligo pealei

  Squids4Kids program

  Squires, Daniel

  Staaf, Danna

  Stanford University

  statoliths (organs)

  Stewart, Julie: Architeuthis dissection (2008)

  Humboldt squid population research

  Monterey Bay research cruise (November 2009)

  Ocean Sciences 2010 presentation

  stomachs

  Stow, Dorrik

  strandings, sea life

  Strömgren Allen, Nina

  sucker rings

  suckers

  and bioluminescence

  chemoreceptors in

  and “suction cups”

  teeth and hooks on

  surf clams

  tags, tracking

  Taningia danae. See Dana octopus squid (Taningia danae)

  taste buds

  Tchernichovsky, Ofer

  teeth, sucker

  temperament

  frustration behavior

  temperature, water: effect of, on oxygen levels

  tentacle elasticity

  tentacles

  and brain function

  toxins in. See also feeding tentacles

  teuthology

  Thompson, J. J.

  “tool use”

  toxins: domoic acid

  mercury levels

  and octopuses

  and squid

  tracking tags

  translucence, body

  “Truman” (GPO)

  two-spot octopus

  ubiquitin

  UCLA

  University of Colorado at Boulder

  University of Illinois

  urbilateria

  Vale, Ron

  vampire squi
d (Vampyroteuthis infernalis)

  Van Sommeran, Sean

  Verne, Jules

  Video-Enhanced Microscopy

  Voss, Gilbert

  Vulcanoctopus hydrothermalis. See deep-sea octopus (Vulcanoctopus hydrothermalis)

  Waal, Franz de

  Walpole, Horace

  water-column habitat

  water temperature: and oxygen

  wavelengths, light

  whales. See blue whales; sperm whales

  Wilson, E. O.

  Wood, James B.

  Woods Hole, Massachusetts. See Marine Biological Laboratory

  Yale University

  Yeomans, Rob

  Young, John Zachary

  zebra finch

  Zeidberg, Lou

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  WENDY WILLIAMS is the author of several books, including the recent Cape Wind: Money, Celebrity, Class, Politics, and the Battle for Our Energy Future on Nantucket Sound. Her journalism has appeared in Scientific American, Science, the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times, Parade magazine, Conservation Biology, the Boston Globe, and in many other publications. She has won a number of awards for investigative reporting, and in 2007 Cape Wind was named one of the year’s ten best environmental books by Booklist and one of the year’s best science books by Library Journal. She lives in Mashpee, Massachusetts, on Cape Cod.

  EDITOR: David Cashion

  DESIGNER: Sarah Gifford

  PRODUCTION MANAGER: Alison Gervais

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Williams, Wendy.

  Kraken : the curious, exciting, and slightly disturbing science of squid / by Wendy Williams.

  p. cm.

  Includes bibliographical references and index.

  ISBN 978-0-8109-8465-3 (alk. paper)

  1. Squids. I. Title.

  QL430.2.W55 2010

  594’.58—dc22

  2010032489

  Text copyright © 2010 Wendy Williams

  Published in 2011 by Abrams Image, an imprint of ABRAMS.

  All rights reserved. No portion of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, mechanical, electronic, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without written permission from the publisher.

  Abrams Image books are available at special discounts when purchased in quantity for premiums and promotions as well as fundraising or educational use. Special editions can also be created to specification.

  For details, contact specialmarkets@abramsbooks.com or the address below.

  www.abramsbooks.com

  WENDY WILLIAMS is the author of several books, including most recently Cape Wind: Money, Celebrity, Class, Politics, and the Battle for Our Energy Future (with Robert Whitcomb). Her journalism has appeared in Scientific American, Science, the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times, Parade magazine, Conservation Biology, the Boston Globe, and many other publications. She has won a number of awards for investigative reporting, and in 2007 Cape Wind was named one of the year's ten best environmental books by Booklist and one of the year's best science books by Library Journal. She lives on Cape Cod, Massachusetts.

  Cover design by Sarah Gifford

  Author photograph by Greg Auger

  Front jacket: Cover artwork from Kunstformen

  der Natur (1904) by Ernst Haeckel

  115 West 18th Street

  New York, NY 10011

  www.abramsimage.com

  PRAISE FOR WENDY WILLIAMS

  KRAKEN:

  THE CURIOUS, EXCITING, AND SLIGHTLY DISTURBING SCIENCE OF SQUID

  “Kraken extracts pure joy, intellectual exhilaration, and deep wonder from the most unlikely of places—squid. It is hard to read Wendy Williams's luminous account and not feel the thrill of discovery of the utterly profound connections we share with squid and all other living things on the planet. With wit, passion, and skill as a storyteller, Williams has given us a beautiful window into our world and ourselves.”

  — NEIL SHUBIN, AUTHOR OF YOUR INNER FISH

  “Wendy Williams's Kraken weaves vignettes of stories about historical encounters with squid and octopus, with stories of today's scientists who are captivated by these animals. Her compelling book has the power to change your worldview about these creatures of the sea, while telling the gripping, wholly comprehensible story of the ways in which these animals have changed human medical history.”

  — MARK J. SPALDING, PRESIDENT, THE OCEAN FOUNDATION

  CAPE WIND: MONEY, CELEBRITY, CLASS, POLITICS, AND THE BATTLE FOR OUR ENERGY FUTURE

  “A genuine page-turner . . . gleefully entertaining.” —BOSTON GLOBE

  “A great summer beach read . . . Cape Wind is less an argument for wind power than an indictment of our money-soaked political process.”

  —NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW

  “Breezy and informative fun.” —WEEKLY STANDARD

  A Booklist Top Ten Environmental Book of the Year

  A Library Journal Best Science Book of the Year

 

 

 


‹ Prev