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Main Ref. | Jereb, P. and C.F.E. Roper (eds.), 2005 |
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Remarks | Small, benthic squid (Ref. 118073) found in shallow coastal waters (Refs. 843, 1695), living in muddy and sandy areas near seagrass meadows (Ref. 118075). Hosts a symbiotic luminescent bacteria Vibrio fischeri, the sole bacterium found to naturally thrive in E. scolopes light organ. This symbiont colony reaches as much as 10^9 cells, and remains remarkably monospecific (Ref. 118072). The microbial colony serves as an antipredation measure for the squid, while the microbe gets shelter and nutrition from the squid. When E. scolopes forages at night, the bacterial colony emit light which matches the intensity of the moonlight above it, thus reducing the host's silhouette, preventing it from being eaten by predators in the ocean floor below (Ref. 118071). It also uses another form of camouflage by sticking sand grains to its body (Ref. 118075). A nocturnal predator, the squid finds shelter in the sand during the day and hunts at night over shallow-water sand flats (Ref. 118073). Mainly feeds on the shrimp Palaemon debilis but also consumes small worms (Ref. 122680). |
Marine - Neritic | Marine - Oceanic | Brackishwater | Freshwater | |
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Marine zones / Brackish and freshwater bodies |
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Substrate | Benthic: mobile; demersal; Soft Bottom: sand; mud; |
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Substrate Ref. | Norman, M., 2003 |
Special habitats | Other habitats: burrows; |
Special habitats Ref. | State of hawaii, 2020 |
Ref. | Visick, K.L. and M.J. McFall-Ngai, 2000 |
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Associations | symbiosis; mutualism; |
Associated with | Vibrio fischeri. |
Association remarks | The light organ of a newly hatched E. scolopes juvenile is devoid of bacteria. Dew hours upon hatching, V. fischeri colonize the light organ of the young squid, triggering morphological and developmental changes in both organisms. Specificity between the two species is attained through a mutual dialogue, from initial encounter, early negotiation on entry and attachment of the microbe to the light organ, to stabilization of this dynamic, mutual interaction (Ref. 118071). |
Parasitism | inside host |
Feeding type | mainly animals (troph. 2.8 and up) |
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Feeding type Ref. | Shears, J., 1988 |
Feeding habit | hunting macrofauna (predator) |
Feeding habit Ref. | Shears, J., 1988 |
Estimation method | original sample | unfished population | Remark | ||
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Troph | s.e. | Troph | s.e. | ||
From diet composition | |||||
From individual food items | 3.66 | 0.58 | Trophic level estimated from a number of food items using a randomized resampling routine. | ||
Ref. |