Octopus ancestor is the first of its kind with 10 functional arms
Named after US President Joe Biden, Syllipsimopodi bideni lived 328 million years ago.
Researchers have identified an extinct vampire squid-like creature that is the first of its kind with 10 functional arms.
The earliest known relative of octopuses and vampire squid has been named after US President Joe Biden.
Syllipsimopodi bideni had 10 arms, fins, and rows of suckers to clutch prey.
It lived 328 million years ago and represents a new species of vampyropod – the group of marine animals that includes modern octopuses and vampire squid.
Christopher Whalen, a National Science Foundation postdoctoral fellow in Yale’s department of earth & planetary sciences and at the American Museum of Natural History, said: “This is the first and only known vampyropod to possess 10 functional appendages.”
Vampyropods are soft-bodied cephalopods that typically have eight arms and an internalised shell or fin supports.
Because they do not have hard structures, fossils of the creatures are not very common.
The new study is based on an exceptionally well preserved vampyropod fossil from the collections of the Royal Ontario Museum, which was originally discovered in what is now Montana, America.
The specimen extends the fossil record of the group by about 82 million years.
Dr Whalen said: “The arm count is one of the defining characteristics separating the 10-armed squid and cuttlefish line (Decabrachia) from the eight-armed octopus and vampire squid line (Vampyropoda).
“However, all previously reported fossil vampyropods preserving the appendages only have eight arms, so this fossil is arguably the first confirmation of the idea that all cephalopods ancestrally possessed 10 arms.”
Two of the newly discovered animal’s arms are longer than the other eight, and its torpedo-shaped body is similar to that of today’s squids.
The researchers speculate the animal used its longer arms to capture prey – smaller, shelled animals – and its shorter arms to confine and manipulate prey.
It has been named after the American president because the publication was accepted soon after his inauguration and the riots in the US Capitol.
The findings are published in Nature Communications.