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In the ocean's depths, two titans wage battle: the sperm whale and the colossal squid.
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Sperm whales use echolocation to hunt these squid for food, but even against this gigantic animal, squid can put up an impressive fight.
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Scientists know this because on the bodies of washed-up whales, they frequently find huge, round suction scars, emblazoned there by large, grasping tentacles.
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Ranging in size from this giant's impressive 14 meters to the 2.5 centimeters of the southern pygmy squid, these creatures fall into the group of animals known as cephalopods.
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There are about 500 squid species worldwide, and they live in all the world's oceans, making them a reliable food source for whales, dolphins, sharks, seabirds, fish, and even other squid.
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Indeed, squid themselves are fearsome ocean predators.
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But their most extraordinary adaptations are those that have evolved to help them thwart their predators.
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Squid, which can be found mainly in estuarine, deep-sea, and open-water habitats, often swim together in shoals.
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Being out in the open without anywhere to hide makes them vulnerable, so as a first line of defense, they rely on large, well-developed eyes.
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In the colossal squid, these are the size of dinner plates, the largest known eyes in the animal kingdom.
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When it's dark or the water is murky, however, squid rely on a secondary sensory system, made from thousands of tiny hair cells that are only about twelve microns long and run along their heads and arms.
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Each of these hair cells is attached to axons in the nervous system.
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Swimming animals create a wake, so when the hairs on the squid's body detect this motion, they send a signal to the brain, which helps it determine the direction of the water's flow.
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This way, a squid can sense an oncoming predator in even the dimmest waters.
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Aware of the threat, a squid can then mask itself from a predator.
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Squid skin contains thousands of tiny organs called chromatophores, each made of black, brown, red or yellow pigments and ringed in muscle.
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Reflecting cells beneath the chromatophores mirror the squid's surroundings, enabling it to blend in.
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So, when the muscles contract, the color of the pigment is exposed, whereas when the muscles relax the colors are hidden.
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Each of these chromatophores is under the individual control of the squid's nervous system, so while some expand, others remain contracted.
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That enables countershading, where the underside of the squid is lighter than the top, to eliminate a silhouette that a predator might spy from below.
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Some predators, however, like the whales and dolphins, get around this ruse by using sound waves to detect a squid's camouflaged form.
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Not to be outfoxed, the squid still has two more tricks up its sleeves.
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The first involves ink, produced inside its mantle.
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Squid ink is made mostly of mucus and melanin, which produces its dark coloring.
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When squid eject the ink, they either use it to make a large smokescreen that completely blocks the predator's view or a blob that roughly mimics the size and shape of the squid.
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This creates a phantom form, called a pseudomorph, that tricks the predator into thinking it's the real squid.
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As a final touch, squid rely on jet propulsion to rapidly shoot away from their hunters, reaching speeds of up to 25 miles per hour and moving meters away in mere seconds.
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This makes them Earth's fastest invertebrates.
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Some squid species have also developed unique adaptive behaviors.
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The deep-sea vampire squid, when startled, uses its webbed arms to make a cape it hides behind.
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The tiny bobtail, on the other hand, tosses sand over its body as it burrows away from prying eyes.
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The Pacific flying squid uses jet propulsion for another purpose: to launch itself right out of the water.
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Squids' inventive adaptations have allowed them to proliferate for over 500 million years.
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Even now, we're still uncovering new species.
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And as we do, we're bound to discover even more about how these stealthy cephalopods have mastered survival in the deep and unforgiving sea.