Taonius
Richard E. Young and Katharina M. Mangold (1922-2003)- Taonius borealis
- Taonius pavo
Introduction
Species of Taonius are large squids (up to 660 mm ML) with long, slender terminal fins (as seen in the video still frame to the right) and hooklike teeth on largest club suckers. They are found circumglobally in the midwaters of the open ocean. An AVI format video clip of this animal is available at Cephalopods in Action.
Taonius pavo in the cockatoo position. © Michael Vecchione.
Diagnosis
A taoniin ...
- with large, claw-like suckers in the medial two series on the club manus.
- with long, lanceolate, terminal fins.
Characteristics
- Tentacles
- Tentacular clubs with enlarged suckers that bear one or two large, central, hook-like teeth.*
- distal 2/3 of tentacular stalk with two series of suckers and pads.
- Funnel
- Funnel valve absent.
- Funnel organ: Dorsal pad with three round, fat papillae.
- Mantle
- Presence or absence of tubercles at funnel-mantle fusion varies among species.
- Presence or absence of tubercles at funnel-mantle fusion varies among species.
- Fins
- Terminal, lanceolate, very long and narrow.
- Terminal, lanceolate, very long and narrow.
- Photophores
- Two ocular organs: Medial organ large, crescent-shaped; lateral organ small, crescent-shaped within concavity of first.
- Arm tip photophores absent.
*Unique in family.
Comments
Characteristics are from Voss (1980).
Figure. These insitu pictures of a Taonius-like squid, possibly T. borealis. were taken by an ROV of the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute off California at 34°25.79'N, 127°31.63'W. The near parallel (i.e. forward) orientation of the hemispherical eyes is a feature that is shared with subadult and adult Taonius. Note the large ocular photophores, the very slender, spindle-shaped digestive gland and the heavy pigmentation of the head and brachial crown. © MBARI 2001 http://www.mbari.org/rd/midwater.
Life history
As in Sandalops, species of Taonius go through a stage while in upper mesopelagic depths, in which the stalked eye has a nearly tubular shape (Young, 1975). The bottom of the eye is covered by two large photophores, one of which is strongly bilobed.
Figure. Ventral-oblique (left) and ventral (right) views of a tubular eye of a juvenile T. pavo, off Hawaii. Photograph by R. Young.
Figure. Dorsal view of a young Taonius (left) and a dorsal view of the anterior end of this squid (right), taken off Florida from a submersible of the Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institution. The eyes are just beginning the transition to a hemispherical shape. Large photophores appear to cover he posterior surface of the eyes. Photographs taken by E. Widder/HBOI.
Paralarvae of T. pavo from Hawaiian waters have been identified. they are distinctive among cranchiid paralarvae from these waters in the near lack of chromatophores.
Figure. Paralarvae of T. pavo, Hawaiian waters. The 4.9 mm ML paralarva (left) has no chromatophores. The 14.5 mm ML paralarva (right) from Hawaii has one chromatophore on the dorsal and one on the ventral surface of the head and a few chromatophores on the aboral surface of each tentacular club and one at the base of each tentacle. Also note the small size of the tentacular club and the shape of the fins. The dotted circle in the smaller paralarva indicates the position of the digestive gland. The scale bars are 1 mm. Drawings by R. Young.
Distribution
Vertical distribution
Off Hawaii T. pavo appears to exhibit ontogenetic descent and not to undergo diel vertical migration., Young (1975) found that the structure of the eyes changed with the vertical distribution of this species as in Sandalops melancholicus. Although data were few, he found paralarvae with stalked, laterally compressed eyes, in the upper 400 m; juveniles from 50 to 140 mm ML were captured between 500 and 700 m with most taken between 600 and 650 m. At depths greater than 700 m the squid had hemispherical eyes.
Figure. Vertical distribution of T. pavo, Hawaiian waters. Captures were made with both open and opening/closing trawls. Bars - fishing depth-range of opening/closing trawl. Circle - Modal fishing depth for either trawl. Blue-filled circles - Night captures. Yellow-filled circles - Day capture. Chart modified from Young (1975).
References
Joubin, L. 1900. Céphalopodes provenant des Campagnes de la Princesse-Alice (1891-1897). Résult. Camp. Scient. Monaco, 17: 1-35.
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.
Voss, N. A. 1980. A generic revision of the Cranchiidae (Cephalopoda; Oegopsida). Bull. Mar. Sci. 30: 365-412.
Voss N. A., S. J. Stephen and Zh. Dong 1992. Family Cranchiidae Prosch, 1849. Smithson. Contr. Zool., 513: 187-210.
Young, R. E. 1975. Transitory eye shapes and the vertical distribution of two midwater squids. Pac. Sci. 29: 243-255.
About This Page
Drawings from Voss (1980) are printed with the Permission of the Bulletin of Marine Science.
Richard E. Young
University of Hawaii, Honolulu, HI, USA
Katharina M. Mangold (1922-2003)
Laboratoire Arago, Banyuls-Sur-Mer, France
Page copyright © 1996 Richard E. Young and Katharina M. Mangold (1922-2003)
- Content changed 21 May 2007
Citing this page:
Young, Richard E. and Mangold (1922-2003), Katharina M. 2007. Taonius http://tolweb.org/Taonius/19558/2007.05.21 in The Tree of Life Web Project, http://tolweb.org/
. Version 21 May 2007 (under construction).