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cephalopods
cephalopods Cephalopods are the most highly evolved members of the phylum Mollusca. They are marine animals that are mostly fast-moving predators and they are named for the close union of the head and foot (Greek kephale, head and Latin pes, foot), the latter organ having been elaborated into a series of tentacles that surround the mouth. Modern members of the class include the squids, octopus, and Nautilus, while belemnoids and ammonites are important fossil groups. Modern cephalopods include within their numbers the largest, fastest, and most intelligent marine invertebrates; the giant squid Architeuthis princeps, for instance, reaches lengths of 22m; they are, however, relatively insignificant when numbers of species are considered. Only 730 species exist in our oceans today compared to the approximately 10 500 extinct species that are known. Cephalopods have a long geological history, ranging from the Cambrian to the present day. They were particularly abundant during the Mesozoic, and the ammonites of that period are particularly valuable as zonal indicators. The molluscan body is characteristically divided into four components; the head, foot, visceral mass, and mantle. As in the other classes of molluscs the cephalopods have a mantle cavity that lies behind the head. In this class the mantle cavity has, however, been adapted as a propulsive organ. Water enters around the edge of the mantle but is ejected only through a flexible tube, the hyponome, producing a strong propulsive jet. This system is particularly well developed in the squids, which with their long streamlined bodies are the only invertebrates capable of competing with fish as fast efficient predators in the oceans. All cephalopods have tentacles surrounding the head. In Nautilus, which is a primitive form, they are small and numerous; higher cephalopods have eight to ten muscular arms with suckers. Squids have eight short arms and two long ones, whereas octopus have eight arms of equal length; both use the arms for catching active prey such as fish and crustaceans. Modern cephalopods have very well-developed brains and sense organs, particularly the eyes (which show a similar design to the vertebrate eye). The main feature that enabled cephalopods to become capable of sustained rapid swimming was the development of a buoyant shell. This is an important feature of the ammonites and Nautilus, where it is a large coiled and chambered structure; it has, however, been reduced and adapted in the modern squids and is lost entirely in the octopus. One feature of major taxonomic importance in the shell is the suture, which is the line along which the walls between the chambers meet the main shell wall.
TaxonomyThe numerous shells of fossil cephalopods present in rocks as far back as the Late Cambrian attest to the importance of this group in the past. Using this abundant material as a basis, it has been possible to erect a classification that recognized a division into three broad groups: the Nautiloidea, extending back to the Late Cambrian and characterized by an external shell that may be straight, curved, or coiled and with a simple suture; the Ammonoidea, also with an external shell but with a complex suture, and found from the Early Devonian to the Late Cretaceous; and the Coleoidea, which have an internal shell and are known from the Early Carboniferous.NautiloideaThe modern cephalopod Nautilus (Fig. 1a) appears to be very similar in design to the shelled cephalopods of the past and has been studied extensively for this reason. It consists of two parts, the body and the shell that encloses it. The soft body is surrounded by the mantle and can be completely accommodated within the final chamber of the shell. Surrounding the mouth are about ninety tentacles. These do not have suckers but are very adhesive and are used to catch and hold prey and draw it towards the mouth, where a beak, like that of a parrot, is used to cut it up. On the lower part of the animal is the hyponome, a funnel through which it can eject water from its mantle cavity to provide a propulsive force. Sideways movements of this funnel can be used to change direction. The shell is a smooth, thin, and light planar-spiral. It is held above the animal and opens to the front. Internally the shell is divided into about thirty chambers, increasing in size towards the most recent, and separated by thin walls or septa, which meet the main shell walls along a gently curving line termed the suture. Most recent work on Nautilus has been carried out by Peter Ward of the University of Washington, who has shown that the rate of chamber formation diminishes with age. Early chambers are formed at two-week intervals, but in the adult the formation of a new chamber can take up to three months. The chambers are filled with gas, which makes the shell buoyant, and are connected with each other and the body of the animal by a fleshy tube, the siphuncle. Ward has shown that Nautilus strives to maintain steady non-fluctuating neutral buoyancy during its life by secreting liquid into the chambers or withdrawing it, using the siphuncle, to compensate for changes in body weight. These processes are too slow to power vertical movements, which the animal accomplishes by active swimming.Nautilus is restricted to the Indo-Pacific area and is a predator that is active at night. During the day the animals rest on the bottom at depths up to 500 m. As the light starts to fail they move up to the reef, a journey that may take several hours. Predators such as fish that might otherwise be a threat are asleep at this time and the Nautilus are able to feed through the night on crustaceans and their moulted exoskeletons, apparently a favourite food. As morning approaches they move back over the reef edge and descend to the bottom, where they will spend the day. They are slow swimmers and appear to find their prey by touch; their sight is poor. Nautiloids are the first known cephalopods, represented by small curving shells in the Late Cambrian of China. An explosive radiation within the group during the Early Ordovician produced the many straight and curved shell forms that were important into the Silurian. Many of these were of large size, some of the straight forms reaching lengths of 9–10 m. These endoceratoids gave rise to several groups, most notably in the Late Silurian or Early Devonian to the Nautilida, which includes the modern Nautilus. Most of the Palaeozoic forms became extinct by the end of the Permian, only the Nautilida surviving until the present day, although their relatives the ammonoids were extremely successful during the Mesozoic. AmmonoideaAmmonoids, and particularly the Mesozoic forms known as ammonites, are abundant and well-known fossils frequently collected because of the beauty of their shells. They were once known as ‘Ammon's Horns’ from a fancied resemblance of the coiled shells to the coiled horns of the Egyptian god Ammon, who was represented by a ram's head. The common name ‘ammonite’ is derived from this. Ammonoids evolved from straight-shelled forms during the Palaeozoic and developed the typical planar-spiral coiled form during the Early Devonian.Ammonoid shells differ from those of other cephalopods in having a complex suture (Fig. 2a). This is due to the fact that the septa became increasingly frilled towards the point of attachment with the shell. Early ammonoids or goniatites may have simple zig-zag sutures, but they become increasingly complex from the Triassic to the Cretaceous. These sutures are often represented graphically, one side being drawn starting from the venter, or outer edge of the shell, and proceeding round to the dorsum or inner edge. The direction of the shell opening or aperture is indicated in the diagram by an arrow, and inflections in the suture that point in that direction are termed saddles; those that point in the opposite direction are termed lobes. As the sutures are important in classifying ammonoids, these diagrams are useful tools in developing an understanding of relationships. It is generally considered that ammonoids achieved buoyancy in much the same way as the modern Nautilus, and that the increased complexity of the septa might have developed to improve the strength of the shell so that it would resist implosion at depth. Calculations of shell strength suggest that many ammonoids had shells that were similar in strength to that of the modern Nautilus, although the shell material was thinner, while others had weaker shells and must have been restricted to shallow waters. Many modern cephalopods show size differences between the sexes or sexual dimorphism, and this has been demonstrated in ammonites also. It was noted by the Polish palaeontologist H. Makowski in 1963 that Jurassic ammonites of the genus Quenstedtoceras from one locality consistently showed two adult forms, one of which was larger and had more whorls or turns to the shell. The earlier whorls of both forms were exactly the same but the later whorls of the larger form showed a different ornament. This same relationship has since been shown to occur in many ammonites, and it is thought that, by analogy with modern forms, the microconchs, or smaller shells, were the males while the macroconchs, or larger shells, were the females. Little is known about predation on modern Nautilus beyond the fact that turtles and sea perch will feed on them. It is clear that the shell provides little defence from the attacks of powerful vertebrate predators. Evidence of predation on ammonoids comes from shell damage or the presence of shell material in the stomach contents of other organisms. Healed damage to shells of Early Jurassic ammonites has been attributed to attacks by fish; shells of various ammonites have been found in pellets derived from plesiosaurs, which suggests that they were preyed on by these marine reptiles. Erle Kauffmann of the University of Colorado published in 1960 a study of a large ammonite of the genus Placenticeras that had been bitten a number of times by a mosasaur, a large marine lizard. The mosasaur had clearly moved the ammonite around in its mouth several times before devouring it, apparently indicating that the mosasaurs hunted ammonites methodically and knew exactly how to handle them. The earliest ammonoids appeared during the Early Devonian and were derived from a group of straight-shelled nautiloids. The sutures rapidly became more complex leading to the ‘goniatitic’ condition, which characterized a large group of ammonoids that were important during the Carboniferous and the Permian. This group almost became extinct at the end of the Devonian, only one genus surviving to give rise to the Carboniferous radiation. Almost all the goniatites became extinct at the Permo-Triassic boundary. The few survivors again gave rise to an explosive radiation during the Triassic, in this case of a group known as the ceratites in which the basic goniatitic suture had increased in complexity. From the ceratites the basic ammonite stock arose during the Triassic; these ammonites, of the Order Phylloceratida, gave rise to the very diverse ammonites that occur throughout the Jurassic and Cretaceous. This pattern of short-lived groups diversifying rapidly and then being replaced by offshoots from an ancestral stock is termed iterative evolution. Ammonites became extinct at the end of the Cretaceous after a slow decline that started in the early Late Cretaceous and was probably due to adverse environmental conditions related to a series of marine regressions. During the Late Cretaceous a group of ammonites developed with shells that deviated from the normal planar-spiral pattern. These are termed heteromorphs (Fig. 2b). At one time their sometimes bizarre shapes were thought to indicate racial senility of the lineage. More recent study has shown that this view is incorrect and that they were in fact highly specialized forms adapted to a variety of environments. Their asymmetric shapes would have made locomotion by jet propulsion impossible and they would have led a predominantly benthonic life as scavengers, or even filter-feeders. ColeoideaThe coleoids include modern squids, cuttlefish, octopuses, and the argonauts or paper-nautilus, together with extinct groups such as the belemnites. In these animals the body structure is broadly comparable to that seen in Nautilus; the shell, however, is internal or, in the case of the octopus, has been lost entirely. In the cuttlefish Sepia the internal shell is oval and consists of a series of closely spaced chalky partitions (the cuttlefish-bone). The animal is able to control its buoyancy by pumping liquid in and out of the chambers between the partitions, a system very similar to that found in Nautilus. In addition many squids use a system in which ammonium chloride is stored in the tissues to provide buoyancy. This system freed them from the depth limitations imposed by buoyant shells, and to this day the deeper parts of the ocean are extensively colonized by squid.The earliest coleoids are known from the Mississippian (Early Carboniferous) of North America and appear to have been derived from straight-shelled nautiloids. By the Triassic the well-known belemnites had appeared (Fig. 3a). These are characterized by a solid calcite rod or guard, which has developed over the initial part of the chambered shell or phragmocone, which has itself been reduced to a small conical structure (Fig. 3b). A flat expanded tongue extended forward (the pro-ostracum) and presumably protected the anterior part of the body. Like the ammonites, the belemnites expanded and diversified through the Jurassic and Cretaceous and then dwindled, although the belemnites continued into the early Tertiary before becoming extinct. David K. Elliott Bibliography Lehmann, U. (1981) The ammonites: their life and their world. Cambridge University Press. |
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Cite this article
PAUL HANCOCK and BRIAN J. SKINNER. "cephalopods." The Oxford Companion to the Earth. 2000. Encyclopedia.com. 27 May. 2012 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>. PAUL HANCOCK and BRIAN J. SKINNER. "cephalopods." The Oxford Companion to the Earth. 2000. Encyclopedia.com. (May 27, 2012). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O112-cephalopods.html PAUL HANCOCK and BRIAN J. SKINNER. "cephalopods." The Oxford Companion to the Earth. 2000. Retrieved May 27, 2012 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O112-cephalopods.html |
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Cephalopods
CephalopodsWhat group of marine invertebrates was celebrated by a Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States? (Answer: cephalopods.) Oliver Wendell Holmes (1809–1894) wrote the poem "The Chambered Nautilus" in 1858 to describe the shell of the cephalopod Nautilus. Nautilus belongs to the cephalopods, a category of mollusks to which the octopus, squid, and cuttlefish octopus also belong. The phylum Mollusca also includes the gastropods (snails and slugs) and bivalves (such as clams and oysters) among others, and is considered one of the most intelligent and successful invertebrate groups in the oceans. Major CharacteristicsAll cephalopods live in the marine environment, where they are carnivores. A shared trait of the group are sucker-bearing tentacles used to seize and hold prey. The tentacles range in number from eight in the octopus to more than ninety in Nautilus. The tentacles surround a powerful beak-like mouth. Many living cephalopods (but not Nautilus ) possess an ink sac capable of ejecting a dark fluid to confound predators. Some octopuses, squids, and cuttlefish have the remarkable ability to change color and color patterns to better blend in with the surrounding seafloor. While most other mollusks have hard external shells, most cephalopods do not. Nautilus has a planispherally coiled external shell, while squids and cuttlefish have a smaller internal skeleton, and octopus has no hard skeleton at all. The cephalopods all have two well-developed eyes used in hunting prey. The octopus spends most of its time scurrying along the seafloor, feeding on other bottom dwellers such as crabs. In contrast, Nautilus and squids are active swimmers and also can prey on fish. All cephalopods can move backwards fairly quickly by expelling water in a type of jet propulsion. Because they are elusive creatures, the habits and ecological details of most species of cephalopods are unknown. Similarly, the population sizes are not well known, making it difficult in many cases to determine if a species is endangered. Overfishing of the most commercially desirable species has occurred in the past. Because of the rapid reproduction of cephalopods, a temporary ban on fishing often is successful in restoring the fishery populations. Octopuses, Cuttlefish, and SquidThere are approximately two hundred species of octopuses, found throughout the world primarily in shallow coastal waters. The most common species, Octopus vulgaris, is approximately 1 meter (3 feet) at adulthood, and lives for up to 18 months. The solitary O. vulgaris lives inside a small cave or den on the ocean bottom, and will inhabit tires, barrels, and other hollow spaces in human debris, if available. This habit is exploited by humans who harvest octopuses by setting and retrieving "octopus pots" made of clay or plastic. O. vulgaris is the principal commercially harvested octopus. Cuttlefish are found in the eastern Atlantic Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea. The common cuttlefish, Sepia officinalis, is about one-third of a meter long (about 1 foot) as an adult. Ink from the cuttlefish has been used for centuries for writing, and its hard internal shell, the cuttlebone, often is placed in birdcages for beak-sharpening and as a source of calcium. Octopuses have eight arms, whereas squids have ten, two of which are longer and specialized for feeding. Squids are deemed not as intelligent as octopuses, but are more streamlined and much faster and stronger swimmers, chasing down their prey at top speeds of over 12 kilometers (20 miles) per hour. Squid are fed upon by birds, sea mammals such as sperm whales, and humans. The annual catch of squid is in the hundreds of thousands of metric tons, most of which is caught by Japanese fisherman. Giant Squid.Perhaps the most spectacular of the living cephalopods is the giant squid. The giant squid, Architeuthis (Greek for "ruling squid"), is present in the deep oceans around the world, but most commonly has been found near New Zealand. Living at depths of up to 1,000 meters (about 330 feet), Architeuthis probably feeds on fish and other smaller squids. The elusive animal has never been observed alive in its deep-sea habitat, but dead or dying specimens up to 19 meters (60 feet) long have been caught by fishermen, washed up on beaches, or become stranded in shallow waters. Some scientists think strandings may be increasing due to effects of global warming. Although the giant squid is one of the largest predators in the ocean, it is considered a tasty meal by an even larger predator, the sperm whale. Remains of the horny beaks of giant squids have been found in the stomachs of sperm whales, and sucker marks from the tentacles of giant squids are found on whales. NautilusNautilus is found in the southwestern Pacific Ocean and Indian Ocean. It lives at a depth of several hundred meters during the day, but will come up as shallow as 5 meters (16 feet) during the night to hunt. Planispheral shells of the Nautilus can be cut into two halves that are bilaterally symmetrical. In contrast, conispheral shells (such as most snails) coil along a vertical axis forming a pointed spire, and are not symmetrical. As the living Nautilus grows, it secretes a larger extension of the shell and seals off the older segments of the shell with thin, curved walls called septa. These concave-forward septa form the chambers of the Nautilus. A fleshy cord called the siphuncle connects the chambers. The empty chambers are filled with gas at about atmospheric pressure. The animal can regulate its buoyancy by slowly pumping fluids in and out of the empty chambers through the siphuncle. The Nautilus ' shell is thin, only 1 or 2 millimeters (less than a tenth of an inch), but extremely strong. A strong shell is necessary to resist the great pressures experienced at the depth where Nautilus lives. Experiments with living Nautilus have shown that the shell can endure pressure at depths of up to 600 meters (200 feet) before the shell implodes. see also Bivalves. David M. Rohr BibliographyClarkson, Euan N. K. Invertebrate Palaeontology and Evolution. Cambridge, U.K.: Blackwell Science, 1998. Voss, Gilbert L. "Squids: Jet-Powered Torpedoes of the Deep." National Geographic Magazine (March, 1967):386–411. Ward, Peter D., Lewis Greenwald, and Francise Rougerie. "Shell Implosion Depth for Living Nautilus macromphalus and Shell Strength of Extinct Cephalopods." Lethaia 13 (1980):182. Internet ResourcesSearch for the Giant Squid. Smithsonian Institution. <http://partners.si.edu/squid>. Wood, James B. "The Cephalopod Page." Dalhousie University. http://www.dal.ca/~ceph/TCP/index.html>. |
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Cite this article
Rohr, David M.. "Cephalopods." Water:Science and Issues. 2003. Encyclopedia.com. 27 May. 2012 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>. Rohr, David M.. "Cephalopods." Water:Science and Issues. 2003. Encyclopedia.com. (May 27, 2012). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3409400055.html Rohr, David M.. "Cephalopods." Water:Science and Issues. 2003. Retrieved May 27, 2012 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3409400055.html |
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cephalopod
cephalopod , member of the class Cephalopoda, the most highly organized group of mollusks (phylum Mollusca ), and including the squids , octopuses , cuttlefish , and nautiluses . The class as a whole has become adapted for a free-swimming existence. Cephalopods are able to move about rapidly, and most are aggressive carnivores. The part of the body that forms the foot in other mollusks is located anteriorly in cephalopods instead of ventrally. Part of the foot area surrounds the mouth and is modified into sucker-bearing tentacles, used to capture prey. The tentacles number 8 in octopuses, 10 in squids, and as many as 90 in nautiluses. The rest of the foot forms a muscular funnel, or siphon, which expels water from the mantle cavity, permitting cephalopods to move about by a kind of jet propulsion. Only one existing genus, the nautiluses, the sole survivors of an extinct group known as the nautiloids, possesses an external shell. In the squid and cuttlefish the shell has become internalized and reduced, and in the octopus it is completely absent. The cephalopod head is large and is equipped with prominent eyes that resemble those of vertebrate animals. The class Cephalopoda has a fossil record of 10,000 species, although only 600 exist today. The nautiloid group was dominant through Paleozoic times, and the ammonites flourished in the Mesozoic era. |
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"cephalopod." The Columbia Encyclopedia, 6th ed.. 2011. Encyclopedia.com. 27 May. 2012 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>. "cephalopod." The Columbia Encyclopedia, 6th ed.. 2011. Encyclopedia.com. (May 27, 2012). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1E1-cephalop.html "cephalopod." The Columbia Encyclopedia, 6th ed.. 2011. Retrieved May 27, 2012 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1E1-cephalop.html |
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Cephalopoda
Cephalopoda (phylum Mollusca) Literally ‘head-foot’ (from the Greek kephale, head, and pod-, foot), a class of molluscs, exclusively marine, that are related to the Bivalvia and Gastropoda. Cephalopods are bilaterally symmetrical and have a circlet of prehensile tentacles. The exhalation of a current of water through a muscular funnel provides them with a form of jet propulsion. The shell is either internal or external. Most are active predators. The class includes the Nautiloidea (nautiloids), Sepioidea (cuttlefish), Teuthoidea (squids), Octopoda (octopuses), and the extinct Ammonoidea (goniatites, ceratites, ammonites), and Belemnitida (belemnites). The earliest forms belonged to the Nautiloidea and date from the Upper Cambrian.
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MICHAEL ALLABY. "Cephalopoda." A Dictionary of Zoology. 1999. Encyclopedia.com. 27 May. 2012 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>. MICHAEL ALLABY. "Cephalopoda." A Dictionary of Zoology. 1999. Encyclopedia.com. (May 27, 2012). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O8-Cephalopoda.html MICHAEL ALLABY. "Cephalopoda." A Dictionary of Zoology. 1999. Retrieved May 27, 2012 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O8-Cephalopoda.html |
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cephalopod
cephalopod Any member of the advanced class of predatory marine molluscs Cephalopoda, including squid, nautilus, octopus, and cuttlefish. Each has eight or more arms surrounding the mouth, which has a parrot-like beak. The nervous system is well developed, permitting great speed and alertness; the large eyes have an image-forming ability equal to that of vertebrates. Most squirt an inky fluid to alarm attackers. Cephalopods move by squirting water from their mantle edge. Their heavily yolked eggs develop into larval young that resemble the adults. Members of this class vary dramatically in size from 4cm (1.5in) to the giant squid, which may reach 20m (65ft). There are more than 600 species.
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"cephalopod." World Encyclopedia. 2005. Encyclopedia.com. 27 May. 2012 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>. "cephalopod." World Encyclopedia. 2005. Encyclopedia.com. (May 27, 2012). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O142-cephalopod.html "cephalopod." World Encyclopedia. 2005. Retrieved May 27, 2012 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O142-cephalopod.html |
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Cephalopoda
Cephalopoda The most advanced class of molluscs, containing the squids, cuttlefishes, octopuses, and the extinct ammonites. Cephalopods have a highly concentrated central nervous system within a protective cartilaginous case. The eye has a well-developed retina and is comparable to that of vertebrates. All cephalopods are predacious carnivores capable of swimming by jet propulsion; they have highly mobile tentacles for catching and holding prey.
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"Cephalopoda." A Dictionary of Biology. 2004. Encyclopedia.com. 27 May. 2012 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>. "Cephalopoda." A Dictionary of Biology. 2004. Encyclopedia.com. (May 27, 2012). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O6-Cephalopoda.html "Cephalopoda." A Dictionary of Biology. 2004. Retrieved May 27, 2012 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O6-Cephalopoda.html |
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Cephalopoda
Cephalopoda (cephalopods) Literally ‘head-foot’, a class of Mollusca, exclusively marine, related to the Bivalvia and Gastropoda. The class includes the Nautiloidea (nautiloids), Sepioidea (cuttlefish), Teuthoidea (squids), Octopoida (octopuses), and the extinct Ammonoidea (goniatites, ceratites, ammonites), and Belemnitida (belemnites). The earliest forms belonged to the Nautiloidea and date from the Upper Cambrian.
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AILSA ALLABY and MICHAEL ALLABY. "Cephalopoda." A Dictionary of Earth Sciences. 1999. Encyclopedia.com. 27 May. 2012 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>. AILSA ALLABY and MICHAEL ALLABY. "Cephalopoda." A Dictionary of Earth Sciences. 1999. Encyclopedia.com. (May 27, 2012). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O13-Cephalopoda.html AILSA ALLABY and MICHAEL ALLABY. "Cephalopoda." A Dictionary of Earth Sciences. 1999. Retrieved May 27, 2012 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O13-Cephalopoda.html |
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cephalopod
ceph·a·lo·pod / ˈsefələˌpäd/ • n. any mollusk of the class Cephalopoda, having a distinct tentacled head, including octopuses, squids, and cuttlefish. |
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"cephalopod." The Oxford Pocket Dictionary of Current English. 2009. Encyclopedia.com. 27 May. 2012 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>. "cephalopod." The Oxford Pocket Dictionary of Current English. 2009. Encyclopedia.com. (May 27, 2012). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O999-cephalopod.html "cephalopod." The Oxford Pocket Dictionary of Current English. 2009. Retrieved May 27, 2012 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O999-cephalopod.html |
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cephalopods
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DAVID A. BENDER. "cephalopods." A Dictionary of Food and Nutrition. 2005. Encyclopedia.com. 27 May. 2012 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>. DAVID A. BENDER. "cephalopods." A Dictionary of Food and Nutrition. 2005. Encyclopedia.com. (May 27, 2012). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O39-cephalopods.html DAVID A. BENDER. "cephalopods." A Dictionary of Food and Nutrition. 2005. Retrieved May 27, 2012 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O39-cephalopods.html |
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cephalopod
cephalopod
•bod, clod, cod, god, hod, mod, nod, od, odd, plod, pod, prod, quad, quod, rod, scrod, shod, sod, squad, tod, Todd, trod, wad
•demigod • amphipod • unipod
•tripod • isopod • myriapod • decapod
•cephalopod • monopod • macropod
•gastropod • arthropod • sauropod
•ramrod • Nimrod • hotrod • pushrod
•goldenrod • Novgorod • slipshod
•roughshod • eisteddfod • tightwad
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"cephalopod." Oxford Dictionary of Rhymes. 2007. Encyclopedia.com. 27 May. 2012 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>. "cephalopod." Oxford Dictionary of Rhymes. 2007. Encyclopedia.com. (May 27, 2012). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O233-cephalopod.html "cephalopod." Oxford Dictionary of Rhymes. 2007. Retrieved May 27, 2012 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O233-cephalopod.html |
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