By Alice Lipscombe-Southwell

Published: Thursday, 24 February 2022 at 12:00 am


As they live in the deep sea, giant squid are really hard to study. Much of our information has been pieced together from animals that have washed up on beaches or have been captured in fishing nets. Modern techniques using deep-sea cameras have allowed us to capture them on film a handful of times, but there is still much we don’t fully understand about their lifestyle and behaviour.

How big is a giant squid?

The giant squid is the longest cephalopod out there. That’s the class of molluscs that includes squid, cuttlefish and octopuses. While there have been claims of these ocean giants achieving lengths of 15 or 20 metres, in reality they reach a far more modest 12 to 13 metres. At least, that’s the size of the largest well-preserved individual that has been scientifically recorded. Who knows if there could be a bigger one out there?

The massive molluscs usually weigh around 200-280kg, according to scientific records, but there is one chonky individual that tipped the scales at 317.62kg.

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Dead giant squid specimen, minus its two feeding tentacles © Wikimedia Commons

What do giant squid look like?

Much like other squid species, the giant squid is characterised by a squishy elongated body, huge eyes, a beak, eight arms and two tentacles. Whereas most squid are pretty small, the giant squid is the supersized version.

When you look at a squid, it has a mantle, which is the ‘body’ of the squid where all the internal organs are located. The mantle has small fins at the end, used for moving around. Then there is the head, and finally the arms and tentacles. When scientists are establishing the size of a squid, they will take measurements of the mantle length as well as the total length. Mantle length can be considered a more reliable measurement, as the arms and tentacles can be stretched out like elastic, making the animal seem far longer than it really is.

How many tentacles does a giant squid have?

Cephalopod limbs seem to get the best of us in a tangle. Do they have arms, legs or tentacles? For a start, all cephalopods have appendages that extend from their head and encircle their beaks. Generally, arms have suckers along most of their length, while tentacles only have suckers at the end.

Octopuses have eight arms and no tentacles, whereas squid and cuttlefish have eight arms and two tentacles. Most male cephalopods will have a specialised arm to deliver sperm to the female. Giant squid are no different to their smaller relatives. They have eight arms and two longer tentacles.

But that’s not all. The suckers on the giant squid’s tentacles and arms measure between two and five centimetres in diameter. These suckers are lined with a sharp, serrated ring of chitin; this tough substance is also found in cephalopod beaks, as well the exoskeletons of insects. When the squid grabs its prey, the suckers’ jagged teeth, combined with suction, allow the squid to hang on tight so the animal cannot escape. It is not unusual to find circular scars around the head and mouth of sperm whales that have snacked on giant squid, and then had to deal with a many-armed meal that fights back.

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Giant squid suckers have jagged structures to help them hang onto their prey © Alamy

When were giant squid discovered?

Aristotle talked about a large squid in Historia Animalium, while Pliny the Elder also described a huge squid with arms measuring more than nine metres in length. Tales of gargantuan sea monsters have been common for centuries, and then there is the Norse legend of the ferocious kraken.

It wasn’t until 1857 that the Danish zoologist Japetus Steenstrup compiled stories, reports of washed-up animals, and one very large squid beak to confirm that an enormous squid indeed lurked in the ocean. He named it Architeuthis dux.

Over the years, the number of species of giant squid has been debated. Then in 2004, one nearly complete specimen was accidentally caught by a fishing trawler off the Falkland Islands. The body was immediately frozen and transferred to the Natural History Museum, London, for study and preservation. DNA samples obtained from this specimen, named Archie, helped scientists confirm that there is only one species of giant squid, Architeuthis dux.