10 strange animals that washed ashore

One had 8 arms and 2 tentacles.

The dead giant squid (Architeuthis dux) found on Golden Mile Beach in Britannia Bay, South Africa

The ocean is filled with creatures that might look strange to human eyes. But every once in a while, these weirdos from the deep make an appearance on dry ground. Here are 10 instances when these ocean animals came (or were spied from) ashore in 2020.

Giant squid with foot-wide eyes

It’s rare to see a giant squid (Architeuthis dux), so people took notice when one washed ashore in Cape Town, South Africa on June 7. These squid are very eccentric-looking — their eight arms and two tentacles are covered with serrated suckers with powerful suction; they have the largest eyes in the animal kingdom (measuring 1 foot, or 30 centimeters, in diameter); and they can reach lengths up to 60 feet (18 meters).

This particular giant squid is now in the collections of the Iziko Museums of South Africa, and its DNA may help researchers determine if there is just one or many species of giant squid living deep beneath the waves.

7-armed octopus (where’s the 8th arm?)

The mysterious octopus was already dead when an man found it at Ebey’s Landing on Whidbey Island, Washington

When a man spotted a “red glob” on the rocky beach of an island near Seattle, he snapped some photos that set off a friendly debate about the creature’s identity. The blob was clearly a cephalopod (a group that includes squid, octopus, cuttlefish and nautilus), but what species was it?

The scientific consensus arrived at the seven-armed octopus (Haliphron atlanticus), a deepwater creature that usually doesn’t swim in Washington’s cold coastal waters.

Despite its curious name, the octopus has more than seven arms. In males, the eighth arm is used during mating, and the rest of the time it stays modestly tucked away in a sac near its right eye.

9-armed octopus almost becomes dinner

The octopus’s ninth arm is an offshoot on its left third arm

After a seaweed farmer caught some octopuses in a trap off Japan, he took them home for his mother to cook. But just after she dropped one in a boiling pot, she realized that it had nine arms, so she fished it out.

How did this octopus get nine arms? Just like lizards can regrow tails, octopuses can regrow arms. However, sometimes the regeneration process flubs and the regrown arm gets an offshoot, or ninth arm. Sometimes these flubs can happen over and over again — one octopus reportedly ended up with 90 arms, according to a 1965 study.

The family donated the nine-armed octopus’s body to a local museum so the public can see this unusual curiosity.

Mass die-off

Thousands of dead sea creatures, including octopuses, fish and starfish, washed ashore on the remote Russian peninsula of Kamchatka. The culprit? A mass poisoning event. Even surfers were bothered by it, saying they felt a mild burning in their eyes after going into the bay.

The die-off may have wiped out as many as 95% of the animals in Kamchatka’s Avacha Bay, a catastrophic event that will likely disrupt the food chain in that area for the remaining animals, local researchers said.

Local and international scientists initially thought that human-made pollution caused the die-off when it started in early October. However, since then it’s come to light that toxic algae could have been the cause of this ecological disaster, the BBC reported.

Gone fishing

Man finds giant spider dragging his pet goldfish out of pond

A man was dismayed to discover that his pet goldfish, Cleo, had met her end from an unexpected eight-legged predator: a spider.

Cleo lived in a pond by the man’s house. Apparently, so did her assassin — a nursery web spider, or a semiaquatic arachnid that can walk on still water, dive under the surface to escape predators and even “fish” for prey many times its size.

This nursery web spider dragged Cleo ashore, apparently for a fishy feast. (We’re sorry, Cleo!)

Trashy poop

A green turtle caught in a net off the coast of Argentina had a very upset tummy. How do we know? It pooped out loads of human trash, including pieces of nylon bags and hard plastics.

It’s likely the turtle mistook this trash for its regular prey, such as jellyfish, seagrasses and worms. The trash it ate instead took up room in its belly, which probably made it hard for the turtle to eat real food and get the nutrients it needed to survive.

Veterinarians gave the turtle a medication that helped it poop, and the turtle recovered, according to the Mundo Marino Foundation in Argentina.

Shark versus swordfish

An illustration showing how the “sword” may have pieced the shark. However, no necropsy (an animal autopsy) was done, so it’s unknown exactly what organs it sliced

Scientists were thrown for a loop when a dead thresher shark washed ashore on the coast of Libya with a swordfish’s “sword” embedded in its body. Swordfish are known to be aggressive toward animals they perceive as threats (including some whales, sea turtles and humans), but they’ve never been documented attacking thresher sharks before.

Thresher sharks eat small fish and wouldn’t be a threat to swordfish, the researchers said.

Perhaps, the two were fighting over prey, the scientists said, although it’s also possible the stabbing was an accident.

Fishy love

The sturddlefish has a mix of genes from the Russian sturgeon and the American paddlefish

Puppy-size sea “pill bugs”

Remember looking for pill bugs (or potato bugs or roly polies) when you were a kid? Can you imagine a big one, about the size of a puppy, lurking deep in the sea?

Like a pill bug, this freaky-looking beast is an isopod, and it’s the largest one on record. Found in Indonesia and dubbed Bathynomus raksasa (“rakasa” translates to “giant” in Indonesian), this isopod measures about 13 inches (33 cm) long and is the first new giant isopod to be found in more than a decade.

Marine blob

What looks like a party balloon but lives deep underwater? A new species of ctenophore called Duobrachium sparksae that’s related to comb jellies.

Researchers first spied these weird, golf tee-size beings in an underwater canyon off the coast of Puerto Rico in 2015, but they didn’t publish the results until this year. Every time D. sparksae (can we just call it “sparky”?) moves, rows of its tiny hair-like cilia refract light into a prism of shining colors, Live Science reported.

Source: livescience.com

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