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Orthocerida

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Orthoceratoidea is a major subclass of nautiloid cephalopods . Members of this subclass usually have orthoconic (straight) to slightly cyrtoconic (curved) shells, and central to subcentral siphuncles which may bear internal deposits. Orthoceratoids are also characterized by dorsomyarian muscle scars (a small number of large scars concentrated at the top of the body chamber), extensive cameral deposits , and calciosiphonate connecting rings with a porous and calcitic inner layer.

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63-784: Orthocerida , also known as the Michelinocerida , is an order of extinct orthoceratoid cephalopods that lived from the Early Ordovician ( 490  million years ago ) possibly to the Late Triassic ( 240  million years ago ). A fossil found in the Caucasus suggests they may even have survived until the Early Cretaceous ( 150  million years ago ), and the Eocene fossil Antarcticeras

126-411: A bright blue light flashed until they began to associate the light with food, extending their tentacles every time the blue light was flashed. The blue light was again flashed without the food 3 minutes, 30 minutes, 1 hour, 6 hours, 12 hours, and 24 hours later. The nautiluses continued to respond excitedly to the blue light for up to 30 minutes after the experiment. An hour later they showed no reaction to

189-474: A call for increased protection and in 2016 all species in Family Nautilidae were added to CITES Appendix II , regulating international trade. Palauans see nautili ( Palauan : kedarm ) as a symbol of vulnerable or fragile character from a belief that they easily die even from slight bumps on ocean rocks; hence someone who gets quickly angry after being pranked is compared to one ( ng ko er

252-448: A centrally-placed tube called a siphuncle . There is a tendency for the chambers to develop cameral deposits , which were used as ballast to balance the long gas-filled shell. Depending on the family , the siphuncle has orthochoanitic (short and straight) or cyrtochoanitic (outwardly curved) septal necks, which protrude from the septa. The shell surface may be (depending on the species or genus) smooth, transversely ribbed, or ornamented by

315-414: A cephalopod, many of whom live less than three even in captivity and under ideal living conditions. However, nautiluses typically do not reach sexual maturity until they are about 15 years old, limiting their reproductive lifespan to often less than five years. Nautilus male has a reproductive organ named Van der Hoeven's organ . Nautilus female has two reproductive organs whose functions are unknown,

378-516: A coleoid-esque internal shell. However, other studies recover it as a primitive oegopsid squid. Orthoceratoidea Currently, Orthoceratoidea comprises the orders Riocerida , Dissidocerida , Actinocerida , Pseudorthocerida , Lituitida and Orthocerida . Orthocerida is a noteworthy paraphyletic order which is ancestral to the major cephalopod groups such as the extinct ammonoids and living coleoids (cephalopods without external shells, including squids, octopus, cuttlefish, etc.). As

441-542: A digestive caecum before entering the relatively brief intestine. Like all cephalopods, the blood of the nautilus contains hemocyanin , which is blue in its oxygenated state. There are two pairs of gills which are the only remnants of the ancestral metamerism to be visible in extant cephalopods. Oxygenated blood arrives at the heart through four ventricles and flows out to the animal's organs through distinct aortas but returns through veins which are too small and varied to be specifically described. The one exception to this

504-448: A fleshy sheath that contains the second structure: an extendable cirrus (plural: cirri). The sheaths of the digital tentacles are fused at their base into a single mass referred to as the cephalic sheath. The digital cirri can be fully withdrawn into the sheath and are highly flexible, capable of extending just over double their fully retracted length and show a high degree of allowable bendability and torsion. Despite not having suckers,

567-452: A nautilus will be unfazed despite the pressure change of as much as 80 standard atmospheres (1,200 psi). The exact reasons for this ability, which is thought to be coincidental rather than specifically functional, are not known, though the perforated structure of the animal's vena cava is thought to play an important role. Unlike many other cephalopods, nautiluses do not have what many consider to be good vision; their eye structure

630-673: A network of fine lirae . Fossils are common and have been found on many continents, including the Americas, Africa, Europe, and Asia. Orthocerids may have swum near the sea bed with their buoyant shell resting horizontally in the water, floated more passively among plankton, or rested on the sea floor. Like modern cephalopods they would have used jet-propulsion for locomotion. Their long, bulky shell and relatively weak muscle attachments however make it unlikely that they were as agile as ammonoids or modern cephalopods. They most likely fed on trilobites and small arthropods . Orthocerid taxonomy

693-585: A potential Cenozoic descendant of orthocerids is known in Antarcticeras , an enigmatic cephalopod from the Eocene of Antarctica with an internal shell akin to that of coleoids but with an anatomy closely resembling that of orthocerids, suggesting that it may represent an orthocerid offshoot that diverged as its own subclass during the Paleozoic and survived up to the Eocene, convergently evolving

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756-412: A seemingly simple brain , not the large complex brains of octopus , cuttlefish and squid , and had long been assumed to lack intelligence. But the cephalopod nervous system is quite different from that of other animals, and recent experiments have shown not only memory, but a changing response to the same event over time. In a study in 2008, a group of nautiluses ( N. pompilius ) were given food as

819-410: A striking white iridescent inner layer. The innermost portion of the shell is a pearlescent blue-gray. The osmeña pearl , contrarily to its name, is not a pearl , but a jewellery product derived from this part of the shell. Internally, the shell divides into camerae (chambers), the chambered section being called the phragmocone . The divisions are defined by septa , each of which is pierced in

882-601: A superorder, Orthoceratiodea was one of six superorders within the Nautiloidea, the others being the Plectronoceratoidea (= Ellesmeroceratoidea of some) from which the others are derived, the Endoceratoidea , Actinoceratoidea , Discosoratoidea , and Nautilitoidea . Current classifications (e.g. Kröger 2008 and Teichert 1980) separate orthoceratoids, endocerids and actinocerids as co-equal taxa to

945-401: Is based primarily on morphological characters found in the shell, principally in the nature of the siphuncle. Parsing these relationships out however can become complicated due to similar characteristics through convergent evolution , making certain taxa appear to have a much longer stratigraphic range than in actuality. Well preserved embryonic shells of the family Pseudorthoceratidae from

1008-542: Is due to the cooler surface waters found in these southern hemisphere habitats as compared to the many equatorial habitats of other nautilus populations – these usually being restricted to depths greater than 100 m (300 ft). Nautiluses generally avoid water temperatures above 25 °C (75 °F). Nautiluses are scavengers and opportunistic predators. They eat lobster molts , hermit crabs , and carrion of any kind. Fossil records indicate that nautiloids have experienced minimal morphological changes over

1071-498: Is even smaller, with a mean shell diameter of 11.56 cm (4.55 in). To swim, the nautilus draws water into and out of the living chamber with its hyponome , which uses jet propulsion . This mode of propulsion is generally considered inefficient compared to propulsion with fins or undulatory locomotion , however, the nautilus has been found to be particularly efficient compared to other jet-propelled marine animals like squid and jellyfish , or even salmon at low speeds. It

1134-414: Is externalized as a planispiral shell . The animal can withdraw completely into its shell and close the opening with a leathery hood formed from two specially folded tentacles . The shell is coiled, aragonitic , nacreous and pressure-resistant, imploding at a depth of about 800 m (2,600 ft). The nautilus shell is composed of two layers: a matte white outer layer with dark orange stripes, and

1197-456: Is highly developed but lacks a solid lens . Whereas a sealed lens allows for the formation of highly focused and clear, detailed surrounding imagery, nautiluses have a simple pinhole eye open to the environment which only allows for the creation of correspondingly simple imagery. Instead of vision, the animal is thought to use olfaction (smell) as the primary sense for foraging and for locating and identifying potential mates. The "ear" of

1260-637: Is not found above the Middle Jurassic and is followed by the Upper Jurassic - Miocene Eutrephoceras . Eutrephoceras is generally subglobular, broadly rounded laterally and ventrally, with a small to occluded umbilicus, broadly rounded hyponomic sinus, only slightly sinuous sutures, and a small siphuncle that is variable in position. Next to appear is the Lower Cretaceous Strionautilus from India and

1323-621: Is small and shallow, the suture only slightly sinuous. The siphuncle is unknown. Obinautilus has also been placed in Nautilidae by some authorities, though it may instead be an argonautid octopus . The family Nautilidae contains up to nine extant species and several extinct species : Genetic data collected in 2011 pointed to there being only three extant species: A. scrobiculatus , N. macromphalus , and N. pompilius , with N. belauensis and N. stenomphalus both subsumed under N. pompilius , possibly as subspecies , though this

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1386-530: Is sometimes considered a descendant of the orthocerids although this is disputed. They were most common however from the Ordovician to the Devonian . The shell is usually long, and may be straight (" orthoconic ") or gently curved. In life, these animals may have been similar to the modern squid , except for their long shell. The internal structure of the shell consists of concavo-convex chambers linked by

1449-481: Is the largest species in the genus. One form from Indonesia and northern Australia , once called N. repertus , may reach 25.4 cm (10.0 in) in diameter. However, most nautilus species never exceed 20 cm (8 in). Nautilus macromphalus is the smallest species, usually measuring only 16 cm ( 6 + 1 ⁄ 2  in). A dwarf population from the Sulu Sea ( Nautilus pompilius suluensis )

1512-429: Is the vena cava, a single large vein running along the underside of the crop into which nearly all other vessels containing deoxygenated blood empty. All blood passes through one of the four sets of filtering organs (composed of one pericardial appendage and two renal appendages) upon leaving the vena cava and before arriving at the gills for re-oxygenation. Blood waste is emptied through a series of corresponding pores into

1575-442: Is thought that this is related to the use of asymmetrical contractile cycles and may be an adaptation to mitigate metabolic demands and protect against hypoxia when foraging at depth. While water is inside the chamber, the siphuncle extracts salt from it and diffuses it into the blood. The animal adjusts its buoyancy only in long term density changes by osmosis , either removing liquid from its chambers or allowing water from

1638-417: Is typically considered a cephalopod "brain": the upper portion of the nerve ring lacks differentiated lobes, and most of the nervous tissue appears to focus on finding and consuming food (i.e., it lacks a "higher learning" center). Nautili also tend to have rather short memory spans, and the nerve ring is not protected by any form of brain case. Nautili are the sole living cephalopods whose bony body structure

1701-555: Is used as a pearl substitute. In Samoa , nautilus shells decorate the forehead band of a traditional headdress called tuiga . Nautilus shells were popular items in the Renaissance and Baroque cabinet of curiosities and were often mounted by goldsmiths on a thin stem to make extravagant nautilus shell cups. The low fecundity , late maturity, long gestation period and long life-span of nautiluses suggest that these species are vulnerable to overexploitation and demand for

1764-731: Is used as a subclass, referring to McCoy (1844), revising his (Kröger 2004) perception of the order Orthocerida Kuhn (1940) as part of the Nautiloidea, in the sense of Sweet 1964 in the Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology . In the classification of Teichert (1988), the subclass Orthoceratoidea is expanded to include the orders found in the Plectronoceratoidea and Orthoceratoidea of Wade (1988), combining forms with thick-ringed ventral siphuncles with those with thin-ringed central siphuncles. The Orthoceratoidea in Kröger (2008) includes

1827-399: Is very distinct in comparison to coleoids. Unlike the ten-armed Decabrachia or the eight-armed Octopodiformes , nautilus may possess any number of tentacles (cirri) from 50 to over 90 tentacles depending on the sex and individual. These tentacles are classified into three distinct categories: ocular, digital, and labial (buccal). There are two sets of ocular tentacles: one set in front of

1890-648: The K-Pg extinction event most nautiloid species went extinct , while members of Coleoidea managed to survive. Following the mass extinction, the nautilus became the only extant species of nautiloids. The family Nautilidae has its origin in the Trigonocerataceae ( Centroceratina ), specifically in the Syringonautilidae of the Late Triassic and continues to this day with Nautilus ,

1953-615: The Mississippian (Lower Carboniferous) Imo Formation of Arkansas revealed significant diversity in the shells' morphology, as well as indicating that Pseudorthoceratidae may be in need of revision. Orthocerids likely arose from the Baltoceratidae, a family of the Ellesmerocerida . However, the phylogeny of Orthocerida is heavily debated as it lacks clearly defined characters. Some important characteristics include

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2016-528: The Organ of Valenciennes and Owen's laminated organ . Nautiluses are only found in the Indo-Pacific , from 30° N to 30° S latitude and 90° E to 175° E longitude. They inhabit the deep slopes of coral reefs . Nautiluses usually inhabit depths of several hundred metres. It has long been believed that nautiluses rise at night to feed, mate, and lay eggs , but it appears that, in at least some populations,

2079-538: The Paleozoic Era, giving rise to multiple orders, most notably ascocerids . The spherical protoconch, or first chamber, of some orthocerids suggests they were ancestors to the Bactritida , small orthoconic forms that gave rise to both the ammonoids and coleoids . Fossilized radulas from orthocerids also suggest a closer affinity with modern coleoids than with Nautilus . There is some dispute as to when

2142-442: The pallial cavity . The central component of the nautilus nervous system is the oesophageal nerve ring which is a collection of ganglia , commissures , and connectives that together form a ring around the animal's oesophagus. From this ring extend all of the nerves forward to the mouth, tentacles, and funnel; laterally to the eyes and rhinophores ; and posteriorly to the remaining organs. The nerve ring does not constitute what

2205-404: The " spadix ", which transfers sperm into the female's mantle during mating. At sexual maturity, the male shell becomes slightly larger than the female's. Males have been found to greatly outnumber females in practically all published studies, accounting for 60 to 94% of all recorded individuals at different sites. The lifespan of nautiluses may exceed 20 years, which is exceptionally lengthy for

2268-531: The European ex- USSR , named by Shimankiy in 1951. Strionautilus is compressed, involute, with fine longitudinal striations. Whorl sections are subrectangular, sutures sinuous, the siphuncle subcentral. Also from the Cretaceous is Pseudocenoceras , named by Spath in 1927. Pseudocenoceras is compressed, smooth, with subrectangular whorl sections, flattened venter, and a deep umbilicus. The suture crosses

2331-499: The Nautilidae. All are protected under CITES Appendix II . Depending on species, adult shell diameter is between 10 and 25 cm (4 and 10 inches). Nautilidae, both extant and extinct, are characterized by involute or more or less convolute shells that are generally smooth, with compressed or depressed whorl sections, straight to sinuous sutures, and a tubular, generally central siphuncle . Having survived relatively unchanged for hundreds of millions of years, nautiluses represent

2394-416: The Nautiloidea, which becomes much reduced in scope. Wade (1988) instead proposed separating the Nautiloidea into phylogenetically related superorders while retaining the basic concept of the subclass: externally shelled cephalopods with simple concave septa and retrochoanitic siphuncles from which the convexly septate Ammonoidea with prochoanitic siphuncles are distinguished. In Kröger 2008, Orthoceratoidea

2457-713: The Orthocerida, Ascocerida, Pseudorthocerda as in Wade (1988) plus the Dissidocerida and Lituitida . The Lituitida, or Lituitiae, has been shown to have evolved from within the Tarphycerida by a straightening of the adult shell, a common character of many tarphycerids. The Dissidocerida, separated from the Orthocerida by Zhuravleva (1964), includes the Troedssonellidae and two small monogeneric orders,

2520-469: The Polymeridae and Rangeroceratidae, both established by Evans (2005). Nautilus † Carinonautilus † Cenoceras † Eutrephoceras † Pseudocenoceras † Strionautilus Allonautilus Nautilus † = Extinct Nautilus (from Latin nautilus  ' paper nautilus ', from Ancient Greek ναυτίλος nautílos  'little sailor') are

2583-406: The ancient pelagic marine mollusc species of the cephalopod family Nautilidae . This is the sole extant family of the superfamily Nautilaceae and the suborder Nautilina . It comprises nine living species in two genera, the type of which is the genus Nautilus . Though it more specifically refers to the species Nautilus pompilius , the name chambered nautilus is also used for any of

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2646-416: The animal (not counting the modified tentacles that form the hood). The labial tentacles are generally not visible, being smaller than the digital tentacles, and more variable both in number and in shape. Males modify three of their labial tentacles into the spadix , which delivers spermatophores into the female during copulation. The tentacle is composed of two distinct structures: the first structure,

2709-425: The arrangement of tentacles around the buccal cone: males have a spadix organ (shaped like a spike or shovel) located on the left side of the cone making the cone look irregular, whereas the buccal cone of the female is bilaterally symmetrical . The crop is the largest portion of the digestive tract, and is highly extensible. From the crop, food passes to the small muscular stomach for crushing, and then goes past

2772-454: The blood in the siphuncle to slowly refill the chambers. This is done in response to sudden changes in buoyancy that can occur with predatory attacks of fish, which can break off parts of the shell. This limits nautiluses in that they cannot operate under the extreme hydrostatic pressures found at depths greater than approximately 800 metres (2,600 ft), and in fact implode at about that depth, causing instant death. The gas also contained in

2835-469: The blue light. However, between 6 and 12 hours after the training, they again responded to the blue light, but more tentatively. The researchers concluded that nautiluses had memory capabilities similar to the " short-term " and " long-term memories " of the more advanced cephalopods, despite having different brain structures. However, the long-term memory capability of nautiluses was much shorter than that of other cephalopods. The nautiluses completely forgot

2898-429: The chambers is slightly below atmospheric pressure at sea level. The maximum depth at which they can regulate buoyancy by osmotic removal of chamber liquid is not known. The nautilus has the extremely rare ability to withstand being brought to the surface from its deep natural habitat without suffering any apparent damage from the experience. Whereas fish or crustaceans brought up from such depths inevitably arrive dead,

2961-419: The dark water below. The underside is almost completely white, making the animal indistinguishable from brighter waters near the surface. This mode of camouflage is called countershading . The nautilus shell presents one of the finest natural examples of a logarithmic spiral , although it is not a golden spiral . The use of nautilus shells in art and literature is covered at nautilus shell . N. pompilius

3024-617: The diameter and thickness of a calciosiphonate connecting ring and shape of orthocone siphuncles. Orthocerida may thus be a polyphyletic group, having arisen as several lineages from early Ordovician cephalopods. Some workers have split off the Pseudorthocerida and Dissidocerida as separate orders, the latter on the grounds that it arose from a different baltoceratid ancestor. The pseudorthocerids are thought to be distinct because their protoconch and septal necks significantly different than orthocerids. Orthocerids flourished in

3087-592: The digital tentacles show strong adhesive capabilities. Adhesion is achieved through the secretion of a neutral (rather than acidic) mucopolysaccharide from secretory cells in the ridges of the digital cirri. Release is triggered through contraction of the tentacle musculature rather than the secretion of a chemical solvent, similar to the adhesion/release system in Euprymna , though it is unclear whether these adhesives are homologous . The ocular tentacles show no adhesive capability but operate as sensory organs. Both

3150-446: The earlier training 24 hours later, in contrast to octopuses, for example, which can remember conditioning for weeks afterwards. However, this may be simply the result of the conditioning procedure being suboptimal for sustaining long-term memories in nautiluses. Nevertheless, the study showed that scientists had previously underestimated the memory capabilities of nautiluses. Nautiluses reproduce by laying eggs . Gravid females attach

3213-403: The eye (pre-ocular) and one set behind the eye (post-ocular). The digital and labial tentacles are arrayed circularly around the mouth, with the digital tentacles forming the outermost ring and the labial tentacles in between the digital tentacles and the mouth. There are 19 pairs of digital tentacles that, together with the ocular tentacles, make up the 42 appendages that are visible when observing

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3276-466: The fertilized eggs, either singly or in small batches, to rocks in warmer waters (21–25 Celsius), whereupon the eggs take eight to twelve months to develop until the 30-millimetre (1.2 in) juveniles hatch. Females spawn once per year and regenerate their gonads , making nautiluses the only cephalopods to present iteroparity or polycyclic spawning . Nautiluses are sexually dimorphic , in that males have four tentacles modified into an organ, called

3339-470: The middle by a duct, the siphuncle . As the nautilus matures, it creates new, larger camerae and moves its growing body into the larger space, sealing the vacated chamber with a new septum. The camerae increase in number from around 4 at the moment of hatching to 30 or more in adults. The shell coloration also keeps the animal cryptic in the water. When seen from above, the shell is darker in color and marked with irregular stripes, which helps it blend into

3402-423: The nautilus consists of structures called otocysts located immediately behind the pedal ganglia near the nerve ring. They are oval structures densely packed with elliptical calcium carbonate crystals. Nautiluses are much closer to the first cephalopods that appeared about 500 million years ago than the early modern cephalopods that appeared maybe 100 million years later ( ammonoids and coleoids ). They have

3465-497: The ocular tentacles and the eight lateral digital tentacles show chemoreceptive abilities; the preocular tentacles detect distant odor and the lateral digital tentacles detect nearby odor. The radula is wide and distinctively has nine teeth. The mouth consists of a parrot-like beak made up of two interlocking jaws capable of ripping the animal's food— mostly crustaceans— from the rocks to which they are attached. Males can be superficially differentiated from females by examining

3528-474: The only living members of the subclass Nautiloidea , and are often considered " living fossils ". The word nautilus is derived from the Greek word ναυτίλος nautílos "sailor", it originally referred to a type of octopus of the genus Argonauta , also known as 'paper nautilus', which were thought to use two of their arms as sails. The arm crown of modern nautilids (genera Nautilus and Allonautilus )

3591-470: The ornamental shell is causing population declines. The threats from trade in these shells has led to countries such as Indonesia legally protecting the chambered nautilus with fines of up to US$ 8,500 and/or 5 years in prison for trading in this species. Despite their legal protection, these shells were reported to be openly sold at tourist areas in Bali as of 2014. The continued trade of these animals has led to

3654-649: The orthocerids became extinct. Although they are said to have survived into the Triassic Period, the two genera that date from that period may actually be pseudorthocerids. In that case, the last orthocerids may date only to the Permian . However, the discovery in the Caucasus of a possible orthocerid from the Early Cretaceous suggests that they may have endured much longer as a ghost lineage . Even

3717-784: The past 500 million years. Many were initially straight-shelled, as in the extinct genus Lituites . They developed in the Late Cambrian period and became a significant group of sea predators during the Ordovician period. Certain species reached over 2.5 m (8 ft) in size. The other cephalopod subclass, Coleoidea , diverged from the nautiloids long ago and the nautilus has remained relatively unchanged since. Nautiloids were much more extensive and varied 200 million years ago. The ancestors of all Coleoidea (shell-less Cephalopods) once possessed shells, and many early cephalopod species are only known from shell remains. Following

3780-570: The type genus, and its close relative, Allonautilus . The fossil record of Nautilidae begins with Cenoceras in the Late Triassic, a highly varied genus that makes up the Jurassic Cenoceras complex. Cenoceras is evolute to involute, and globular to lentincular; with a suture that generally has a shallow ventral and lateral lobe and a siphuncle that is variable in position but never extremely ventral or dorsal. Cenoceras

3843-597: The venter essentially straight and has a broad, shallow, lateral lobe. The siphuncle is small and subcentral. Pseudocenoceras is found in the Crimea and in Libya . Carinonautilus is a genus from the Upper Cretaceous of India , named by Spengler in 1919. Carinonautilus is a very involute form with high whorl section and flanks that converge on a narrow venter that bears a prominent rounded keel. The umbilicus

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3906-564: The vertical movement patterns of these animals are far more complex. The greatest depth at which a nautilus has been sighted is 703 m (2,306 ft) ( N. pompilius ). Implosion depth for nautilus shells is thought to be around 800 m (2,600 ft). Only in New Caledonia , the Loyalty Islands , and Vanuatu can nautiluses be observed in very shallow water, at depths of as little as 5 m (15 ft). This

3969-403: Was prior to the description of three additional species ( samoaensis , vanuatuensis and vitiensis ). The following taxa associated with the family Nautilidae are of uncertain taxonomic status: Nautilus are collected or fished for sale as live animals or to carve the shells for souvenirs and collectibles, not for just the shape of their shells, but also the nacreous inner shell layer, which

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