Hectocotylus
A hectocotylus (pl.: hectocotyli) is one of the arms of male cephalopods that is specialized to store and transfer spermatophores to the female.[1] Structurally, hectocotyli are muscular hydrostats. Depending on the species, the male may use it merely as a conduit to the female, analogously to a penis in other animals, or he may wrench it off and present it to the female.
The hectocotyl arm was first described in
combining the Greek word for "hundred" and Latin word for "hollow thing, cup".Structure
Generalized anatomy of squid and octopod hectocotyli:
Variability
Hectocotyli are shaped in many distinctive ways, and vary considerably between species. The shape of the tip of the hectocotylus has been much used in octopus systematics.
- Many coleoids lack hectocotyli altogether.[6]
- Among Decapodiformes (ten-limbed cephalopods), generally either one or both of arms IV are hectocotylized.
- In
- In male seven-arm octopuses (Haliphron atlanticus), the hectocotylus develops in an inconspicuous sac in front of the right eye that gives the male the appearance of having only seven arms.
- In argonauts, the male transfers the spermatophores to the female by putting its hectocotylus into a cavity in the mantle of the female, called the pallial cavity. This is the only contact the male and female have with each other during copulation, and it can be at a distance. During copulation, the hectocotylus breaks off from the male. The funnel–mantle locking apparatus on the hectocotylus keeps it lodged in the pallial cavity of the female.
Shape of hectocotylus | Species | Family |
---|---|---|
Abraliopsis morisi
|
Enoploteuthidae | |
Argonauta bottgeri | Argonautidae | |
Bathypolypus arcticus | Octopodidae | |
Graneledone verrucosa | Octopodidae | |
Haliphron atlanticus
|
Alloposidae
| |
Ocythoe tuberculata | Ocythoidae
| |
Scaeurgus patagiatus | Octopodidae | |
Tremoctopus violaceus
|
Tremoctopodidae
| |
Uroteuthis duvauceli
|
Loliginidae |
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hectocotylus.
- ISBN 978-1-108-54674-4.
- ISBN 9780698170391.
- ^ Thompson, D'Arcy Wentworth (1913). On Aristotle as a biologist, with a prooemion on Herbert Spencer. Being the Herbert Spencer Lecture before the University of Oxford, on February 14, 1913. Oxford University Press. p. 19.
- ISBN 9780198527619.
- ^ "GBIF:Hectocotylus Cuvier, 1829". Retrieved 21 November 2016.
- ^ a b Young, R.E., M. Vecchione & K.M. Mangold (1999). Cephalopoda Glossary. Tree of Life Web Project.
- ^ Palacio, F.J. 1973. "On the double hectocotylization of octopods". Melbourne, Fla., etc., American Malacologists, inc., etc. 1973. The Nautilus 87: 99–102.