So many strange creatures ... ... I also heard that there is a sea creature that can make itself become young again when it is old. In other words, it never dies. Studies and investigations are still going on.
Originally posted by Master -_-:cryptids right?
No la... Mesonychoteuthis hamiltoni. Stupid mancha put squid somemore. ![]()
Originally posted by Q.C.Pak:
No la... Mesonychoteuthis hamiltoni. Stupid mancha put squid somemore.
Oi! QC you think you are not stupid. You can't call a squid a squid.
Meso just say that it is huge, the middle syllable will be the species group it belongs to, and no need to guess the name of the person who classified it.
Finding and copying the name makes you not stupid? How silly can you be?
WHAAT ! ........Singapore SOTONG?
Originally posted by mancha:Oi! QC you think you are not stupid. You can't call a squid a squid.
Meso just say that it is huge, the middle syllable will be the species group it belongs to, and no need to guess the name of the person who classified it.
Finding and copying the name makes not stupid? How silly can you be?
Ok... anything. Peace. ![]()
Won't have such thing nowadays la, where would it find food to be as big as an island? eat whales isit?
Recent studies show that giant squid feed on deep-sea fish and other squid species. They are also arch enemies of sperm whales.
Recent studies show that giant squid feed on deep-sea fish and other squid species. They are also arch enemies of sperm whales.

Worldwide giant squid distribution based on recovered specimens.
The first photographs of a live giant squid in its natural habitat were taken on September 30, 2004, by Tsunemi Kubodera (National Science Museum of Japan) and Kyoichi Mori (Ogasawara Whale Watching Association). Their teams had worked together for nearly two years to accomplish this. They used a five-ton fishing boat and only two crew members. The images were created on their third trip to a known sperm whale hunting ground 970 kilometres (600 mi) south of Tokyo, where they had dropped a 900 metres (3,000 ft) line baited with squid and shrimp. The line also held a camera and a flash. After over 20 tries that day, an 8 metres (26 ft) giant squid attacked the lure and snagged its tentacle. The camera took over 500 photos before the squid managed to break free after four hours. The squid's 5.5 metres (18 ft) tentacle remained attached to the lure. Later DNA tests confirmed the animal as a giant squid.
A giant isopod may be one of approximately nine species of large isopods (crustaceans related to the shrimp and crabs) in the genus Bathynomus. They are thought to be abundant in cold, deep waters of the Atlantic. Bathynomus giganteus, the species upon which the generitype is based, is the largest known isopod and is the one most often referred to by the common name "giant isopod".
Originally posted by Q.C.Pak:They have a term for this species of animal. Forgot what was it.
cryptozoology
All information posted here are from Wikipedia.