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  • 1
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    Moscow State University
    In:  Ruthenica, 4 (2). pp. 173-180.
    Publication Date: 2020-06-03
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 2
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    Moscow State University
    In:  Ruthenica, 2 (2). pp. 91-103.
    Publication Date: 2020-06-03
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 3
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    Moscow State University
    In:  Ruthenica, 4 (1). pp. 67-77.
    Publication Date: 2020-06-03
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2020-09-17
    Description: Four spent females of deep-sea pelagic gonatid squid Gonatopsis octopedatus, dorsal mantle length 24-39 cm, were caught in the 0-50 m layer of the Okhotsk Sea over the depths of 92-126 and approximately 3300 m. Two alike but smaller (12-13.5 cm) females were caught at the surface of the Japan Sea over the depths of 3000-3300 m. They were degenerated, combjelly-like in consistence, most of the arm armature was lost, the oviducts were empty or contained not more than 3-5 eggs up to 4.0-4.3 mm in length. On the contrary, mature males were not degenerated, with most arm hooks and suckers present. The gelatinous degeneration in females begins rather early, at 11 or 111 maturity stages, but at very different sizes. In this period the feeding stops, as degenerated females cannot catch prey. It is supposed that females spawn and juveniles hatch in deep layers, all the eggs are spawned in a short time, and then the females come passively to the surface and die. The difference in size · between females from the two seas may be caused by difference in productivity between very productive Okhotsk Sea and less productive Japan Sea.
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  • 5
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    Pensoft Publishers
    In:  Russian Journal of Aquatic Ecology, 2 (2). pp. 91-102.
    Publication Date: 2020-06-03
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2021-06-17
    Description: The deep-living octopod Cirroteuthis magna Hoyle, 1885 is redescribed, based on the only three specimens known of the species: a mature female (holotype) captured in the south Indian Ocean between Prince Edward and Crozet islands at 2557 m and two specimens, one submature female and one mature male, recently captured in the central Atlantic at 1300 and 3351 m depth, respectively. Video images from the capture of the latter specimen were recorded. This species is characterized by its very great size (to 1300 mm TL), making it the largest known cirrate octopod; butterfly-like shell with open wings ; very voluminous eyes with large lenses; arm length 73–79% of the total length; primary web inserted at different levels on the dorsal and ventral ends of the dorso- and ventrolateral arms on both sides, and at the same level on both ends of the dorsal and ventral arms; each arm is independent of the primary web, and is connected with it by a single vertical membrane or intermediate web that is attached along the dorsum of the arm; absence of nodule at the fusion point of both webs. Very large cirri, the first cirri commencing between the 4th and 5th suckers, with three types of suckers on all the arms; cylindro-conical form and those with the acetabulum highly deformable on the first 2/3 of arms and barrel-like on the rest of the arm; absence of particularly enlarged suckers. C. magna is compared with C. muelleri and other related species. Sperm sacs and spermatozoids from C. magna and C. muelleri are described and compared. The Cirroteuthis genus is reviewed and a diagnosis is proposed. This study confirms that the members of the Cirroteuthidae family show several unusual features of great interest.
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  • 7
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    Taylor & Francis
    In:  Sarsia, 86 (1). pp. 1-11.
    Publication Date: 2021-06-28
    Description: All seven known resident Arctic cephalopods were identified in the collections of the German RV Polarstern (1991, 1993, 1995, 1998) in the waters around Svalbard, northwards from the Kara Sea, in the Laptev and western East Siberian seas: sepia lids Rossia palpebrosa (depths 96–362 m) and R. moelleri (67–101, specimens identified with question mark also at the depths of 38 and 292 m), benthic octopuses Bathypolypus arcticus (180–362 m), Benthoctopus piscatorum (1580–2000 m), and Benthoctopus sibiricus (30m, a juvenile identified with question mark), cirrate octopod Cirroteuthis muelleri (3012–3310 m), and gonatid squid Gonatus fabricii (juveniles: in midwater, 300–500 m, in fish stomachs, 946–990 m). The latter two species are definitely circumpolar and panpolar (inhabiting the whole Polar Basin). The known ranges of R. pulpebrosa, R. moelleri, and B. arcticus are extended from the eastern coasts of Severnaya Zemlya and Vilkitsky Strait to western East Siberian Sea (R. palpebrosa: 150°E) or eastern Laptev Sea (R. moelleri: 130°E, B. arcticus: 135°E), the range of B. piscatorum is extended from West Spitsbergen Island to 91°E. Although gaps still exist in the known distributions of R. palpebrosa. R. moelleri and B. arcticus (these species are considered as West-Arctic or Atlanta-West-Arctic) between the eastern boundaries of their ranges in the Asian Arctic and western boundaries in the Canadian Arctic, there are little doubt that they are in fact circumpolar and widely eurybathic in the western sector of the Arctic but in the eastern sector distributed only at depths 〉 100–200 m (except R. moelleri: to 67 m). B. piscatorum is known at yet in western Arctic only and may be not circumpolar. Benthoctopus sibiricus is the East-Arctic (definitely not circumpolar) shallow-water benthic octopus having relations with the octopods of northwestern Pacific.
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