Sepia officinalis, Linnaeus, 1758

Wild, Elvira, Wollesen, Tim, Haszprunar, Gerhard & Heß, Martin, 2015, Comparative 3 D microanatomy and histology of the eyes and central nervous systems in coleoid cephalopod hatchlings, Organisms Diversity & Evolution (New York, N. Y.) 15 (1), pp. 37-64 : 40

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1007/s13127-014-0184-4

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/B94787AC-FFFA-D241-FC93-1AABC2E4F891

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Sepia officinalis
status

 

Sepia officinalis View in CoL

The adult-like hatchling of S. officinalis ( Fig. 11 View Fig , supplement interactive Fig. 1 View Fig ) is the biggest of the studied specimens (horizontal head diameter ca. 3.5 mm), and therefore, it has the biggest eyes and nervous system (Fig. 2a, supplement “Volumetric analysis” Table 1). As a representative of the Decabrachia, S. officinalis possesses eight arms and two tentacles. The arms are arranged in a circle around the mouth opening and the buccal mass ( Fig. 11b, c View Fig ), whereas the tentacles run between arm pairs 3 and 4. They are retractable in a tentacular pocket formed by a skinny duplicature of the integument between the bases of arms 4 and 3 and below the eye chamber ( Fig. 11c–f View Fig ). Arm pair 4 possesses lateral

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Mollusca

Class

Cephalopoda

Order

Sepiida

Family

Sepiidae

Genus

Sepia

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