Fishermen pick up dying giant squid

Univ. of Fla. / FMNH

A 25-foot-long giant squid is splayed out on a tarp after it was picked up by a fishing crew over the weekend.

Florida fishermen snared a real-life sea monster over the weekend: a giant squid measuring 25 feet in length.

"It's really, really, really rare to get giant squids because they're so huge, and live so deep," John Slapcinsky, a collection manager at the Florida Museum of Natural History, told me. For museum workers and scientists who specialize in giant squids, this specimen is quite the catch.


Jeff Gage / Univ. of Fla. / FMNH

University of Florida researcher Roger Portell injects preservative into the giant squid.

The animal was bobbing in the water when the fisherman chanced upon it on Sunday. They hauled it onto their boat, put it on ice, and brought it to shore. There, they alerted the Florida Fish and Wildlife conservation commission, who called in the Florida Museum of Natural History.

"I thought we definitely need to bring it in, because no one’s going to believe us if we don't," Robert Benz, one of the original squid finders, said in a press release. "I didn’t want to leave it out there and just let the sharks eat it."

Somewhere along the way, the squid died. 

It's now been relocated to the Florida Museum of Natural History, where Slapcinsky and his colleagues are preserving the massive invertebrate. "Soft bodied squids spoil easily," Slapcinsky told me.

The squid will be put through quite the regimen over the next month, and will be injected with and bathed in a cocktail of preservatives. These will kill the bacteria in the body of the squid and firm up the soft tissue of the animal, Slapcinsky explained.

Univ. of Fla. / FMNH

A tentacle coils out from the dead squid's body. Studying the creature and sequencing its DNA should help scientists determine how various breeds of deep-sea squid are related.

Because they're so rarely observed in the wild, or found dead (they get eaten pretty quickly), there's a lot that scientists don't know about the behavior of the enormous animals, like how they reproduce or what they eat. Also, a debate continues about whether giant squids make up a single species, or several, and Slapcisnky hopes that DNA analysis of this new squid will have some answers. 

It's not yet clear if the squid will make it into a museum exhibit, Slapcinsky says — the museum may not have the right equipment or the space to show off the spineless specimen. But it will be available for squid researchers to visit, to take a closer look. 

A large squid is hauled to shore after being found off Florida's coast. WPTV's Jon Shainman reports.

More on giant squids: 


Nidhi Subbaraman writes about technology and science at msnbc.com. Find her on Twitter and join our conversation on the Cosmic Log Facebook page.

Discuss this post

And our local seafood special today was Calamari Ring appetizers..........

  • 2 votes
Reply#1 - Wed Jun 29, 2011 10:42 PM EDT

Cool! Some of the best science ends up coming from accidental finds like this one.

    Reply#2 - Thu Jun 30, 2011 12:01 AM EDT

    um HELLO? any comment, dear journalists, on WHY the squid was dying in the waters of Florida? Anyone wonder?

    • 3 votes
    Reply#3 - Thu Jun 30, 2011 1:09 AM EDT

    um HELLO? any comment, dear Nat, on WHY the article read that the squid died during transportation, not in the water? Any wonder?

      Reply#4 - Thu Jun 30, 2011 1:22 AM EDT

      I think Nat was asking why it was "dying" in the water, not dead in the water. Perhaps it wanted clothing of a different color?

      any comment, dear journalists, on WHY the squid was dying in the waters of Florida?

        #4.1 - Thu Jun 30, 2011 12:00 PM EDT

        Maybe it didn't like breathing BP oil and Corexit?

        • 1 vote
        #4.2 - Mon Jul 4, 2011 2:09 AM EDT
        Reply

        um, Iced?

          Reply#5 - Thu Jun 30, 2011 2:59 AM EDT

          Nat, First off when the fishermen found it(NOT caught it) it was FLOATING!! from this we can surmise that it's health was compromised earlier. These are deep water animals. Don't be so fast to blame man/pollution.(although it can't be ruled out) Perhaps it had a 'run-in' with it's natural predator, a whale?

            Reply#6 - Thu Jun 30, 2011 7:16 AM EDT

            I think they found a dead one washed up on the shore of Japan or China recently, well after the tsunami. It would be interesting to know if there were any links, but it was probably just coincidence.

              #6.1 - Thu Jun 30, 2011 12:05 PM EDT
              Reply

              Congratulations on murdering the last of its kind!

              • 2 votes
              Reply#7 - Thu Jun 30, 2011 10:25 PM EDT

              I could swear It was reported as 23 ft at first. This marks the first time in mankind's history where a fisherman underestimated his catches length. :-)

                Reply#8 - Fri Jul 1, 2011 12:30 AM EDT

                um what is wrong with letting the sharks eat it. it is after all a sea creature and a natural part of the sharks diet. and i agree with Nat-1514765 why was it dying in the waters off florida? you know the BP oil spill last year and all that.

                  Reply#9 - Fri Jul 1, 2011 8:11 AM EDT

                  If you search on "dead giant squid" you will find one or two articles every year or two somewhere in the world. It seems to be uncommon but not unusual.

                    #9.1 - Fri Jul 1, 2011 12:57 PM EDT
                    Reply

                    This is why I don't swim in the ocean. At least on land I'm on top of the food chain......

                      Reply#10 - Sun Jul 3, 2011 10:38 AM EDT

                      Unless you make millions you're on the bottom of the food chain with the rest of us, sorry.

                      Human sharks are the most dangerous kind....

                        #10.1 - Mon Jul 4, 2011 2:12 AM EDT
                        Reply

                        Aarrggghh!! There be monsters in them thar waters!

                          Reply#11 - Mon Jul 4, 2011 8:47 AM EDT
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