TL;DR: Time-series analysis of monthly catches from January 1981 to August 1996 showed two main oscillations, one of which reflects the annual biological cycle of the species and the other has a periodicity of 92 months.
TL;DR: In this article, a myograph was attached to the head of a cephalopod by a thread, as a tension, which was used to measure the velocity of a jet of water from the mantle cavity.
Abstract: 1. Recordings have been made of the pressures in the mantle cavity of some coastal cephalopods, both at rest and while swimming, under conditions as near normal as possible. Pressures of up to 180 cm. of water were developed by Sepia officinalis (250 g. weight), 300 cm. by Loligo vulgaris (350 g.) 170 cm. by Octopus vulgaris (370 g.) and 400 cm. by Eledone moschata (600 g.). 2. The momentum produced by the efflux of the jet of water from the mantle cavity was recorded on an isometric myograph, attached to the head of the animal by a thread, as a tension. The swimming tensions, derived from maximum jet pressures, were in general equivalent to the body weight in Loligo, Sepia and Eledone but in Octopus never exceeded half body weight. 3. In Octopus , however, the arms are powerfully developed and, using five arms for attachment to the side of the tank, they can exert holding tensions of up to 100 times their body weight. In an Octopus of 1 g. body weight this is equivalent to a tension of 2 kg./cm. 2 in the longitudinal muscle at the base of the arms. 4. Comparisons of the tensions and pressures obtained in simultaneous recordings during jet swimming showed, that, with the exception of Octopus , the tension developed is generally equal to twice the cross sectional area of the jet multiplied by the pressure. 5. The theoretical maximal velocity for a single jet cycle in Loligo and Eledone was in accord with observed velocities and the much lower theoretical velocity of Octopus is discussed.
TL;DR: Crude methanol extracts of posterior salivary glands of Eledone, a Mediterranean eight-armed cephalopod, were subjected successively to chromatography on alkaline alumina, to ion-exchange chromatography, and to countercurrent distribution, and demonstrated that eledoisin is an endecapeptide having the following amino acid composition and sequence.
TL;DR: The influence of a 5 min air exposure, a common perturbation associated with handling in aquaculture settings and fisheries, on neuroendocrine and immune parameters in the octopus Eledone cirrhosa is examined and it is suggested that stress and immunity may be associated in these organisms.
TL;DR: Collagen from muscle of volador, pota, and white octopus was characterized in terms of anatomical location, sex, and maturity; there were also significant differences in octopus depending on the age of the individual.
Abstract: Collagen from muscle of volador (Illex coindetii), pota (Toradopsis eblanae), and white octopus (Eledone cirrhosa) was characterized in terms of anatomical location, sex, and maturity. Collagen content was higher in arms than in mantle in all three species; there were also significant differences in octopus depending on the age of the individual. Concerning sex, the largest differences in the amount of collagen were found in relation to total protein content. In volador and pota, collagen solubility was higher in the mantle than in the arms, and in the case of pota there were also sex-related differences. In octopus males, solubility was higher in the arms. Two types of collagen, I and V, were identified as the principal constituents in all three species and at both anatomical locations (mantle and arms). The electrophoretic mobility of the α2 chain differed in the two types of collagen, but the amino acid compositions of the collagen were similar in the mantle and arms in all three species examined. Keyw...