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An expedition spotted a baby of the species in the South Sandwich Islands. This cephalopod can grow to more than 20 feet and has proved elusive in its deep-sea environs.
A one-foot-long baby squid was spotted swimming in the waters around the South Sandwich islands. The footage is unprecedented ...
Seychelles became the first country to comply with an international standard that aims to make governments’ management of ...
A baby colossal squid was filmed in the deep sea by an ocean expedition near Antarctica. The world's largest squid has eluded ...
WWF has worked closely with the Seafood Task Force (STF) to enhance supply chain oversight and drive continuous improvement ...
He and his colleagues had done it with a sci-fi-worthy experiment that recorded every blip of brain activity in a transparent ... out to sea. What if scientists could make the fish think that ...
In a groundbreaking deep-sea discovery, scientists have captured the first-ever video of a colossal squid swimming in the ...
Images of a baby colossal squid this week reminds us that the deep sea is an almost inexhaustible source of awe.
The mysterious creature was filmed in the ocean near Antarctica. Scientists documented the juvenile, which could grow to more ...
Colossal squid are known to be elusive and likely avoid the bright and loud research equipment used underwater.
Colossal Squid — world’s largest invertebrate — has been captured live on cameras living freely in deep sea, a New Zealand researcher confirmed this development to the National Geographic.