Oegopsida
Learn about this topic in these articles:
annotated classification
- In cephalopod: Annotated classification
Suborder Oegopsida Eye open to water, completely surrounded by free eyelid; open-ocean animals living from the surface down to at least 3,000 m. Order Vampyromorpha Purplish-black gelatinous animals with 1 or 2 pairs of paddle-shaped fins at various stages of growth; 8 arms and 2 small…
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bioluminescence
- In bioluminescence: The range and variety of bioluminescent organisms
Of the open-ocean squids (oegopsids) such as Lycoteuthis, Histioteuthis, and Enoploteuthis, as many as 75 percent are self-luminous; i.e., light results not from symbiotic luminous bacteria but from an internal biochemical reaction. In deep-sea squids, the light organ is often found on the eyelid or on the eyeball itself.…
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reproduction
- In mollusk: Reproduction and life cycles
Squids of the suborder Oegopsida and some gastropods have eggs that are suspended in the water. Fertilized eggs commonly undergo spiral cleavage, as in annelids and a number of other “protostome” phyla. The eggs of cephalopods, on the other hand, possess a large amount of yolk, which displaces the…
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