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Argonauta argo

Greater argonaut
Argonauta argo Merculiano.jpg
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Mollusca
Class: Cephalopoda
Order: Octopoda
Family: Argonautidae
Genus: Argonauta
Species: A. argo
Binomial name
Argonauta argo
Linnaeus, 1758
Synonyms
  • Argonauta papyracea
    Röding, 1798
  • Argonauta grandiformis
    Perry, 1811
  • ?Argonauta striata
    Perry, 1811
  • Ocythoe antiquorum
    Leach, 1817
  • Trichocephalus acetabularis
    Chiaie, 1827 in 1823-1831
  • ?Todarus argo nom. nud.
    Rafinesque, 1840
  • Argonauta minor
    Risso, 1854
  • Argonauta naviformis
    Conrad, 1854
  • Argonauta papyria
    Conrad, 1854
  • ?Argonauta argo f. agglutinans
    Von Martens, 1867
  • ?Argonauta argo f. aurita
    Von Martens, 1867
  • ?Argonauta argo f. mutica
    Von Martens, 1867
  • ?Argonauta argo f. obtusangula
    Von Martens, 1867
  • Argonauta bulleri
    Kirk, 1886
  • ?Argonauta argo var. americana
    Dall, 1889
  • Argonauta cygnus
    Monterosato, 1889
  • Argonauta ferussaci
    Monterosato, 1914
  • Argonauta argo mediterranea
    Monterosato, 1914
  • ?Argonauta monterosatoi
    Coen in Monterosato, 1914
  • ?Argonauta monterosatoi
    Coen, 1914
  • ?Argonauta monterosatoi
    Coen, 1915
  • Argonauta sebae
    Valenciennes in Monterosato, 1914

Argonauta argo, also known as the greater argonaut, is a species of pelagic octopus belonging to the genus Argonauta. The female of the species, like all argonauts, creates a paper-thin eggcase that coils around the octopus much like the way a nautilus lives in its shell, hence the name paper nautilus. The Chinese name for this species translates as "white sea-horse's nest".A. argo was the first argonaut species to be described and is consequently the type species of the genus. A. argo is the largest species in the genus and also produces the largest eggcase. Live animals have a characteristic blue sheen on the first arm pair and around the eyes. The eggcase is characterised by two rows of small, sharp tubercles running along a narrow keel, smooth ribs across the walls of the shell, and a thickening along the shell aperture, which forms distinct protrusions or 'horns' on either side.Argonauta cygnus Monterosato, 1889 was described based on a shell which lacked these protrusions, although it is now considered a junior synonym of A. argo. The greatest recorded size of an A. argo eggcase is 300.0 mm.

A. argo is cosmopolitan, occurring in tropical and subtropical waters worldwide. A dwarf form exists in the Mediterranean Sea, which was described as Argonauta argo mediterranea Monterosato, 1914, although this taxon is now regarded as invalid.

A. argo is thought to feed primarily on pelagic molluscs. The species is preyed on by numerous predators. It has been reported in the stomach contents of Alepisaurus ferox from the south-western Pacific.


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