SITKA, Alaska — A large Humboldt squid
caught offshore from Sitka is among numerous sightings of a species seen for the
first time in waters of the Far North and the first of the species recovered
from British Columbia waters.
The 5-foot Dosidicus gigas, or jumbo flying squid, was shipped this week
to California to be kept for research at the Santa Barbara Museum of Natural
History.
The squid was one of a number caught with a dip net by fisher Alan Otness and
his crew on Sept. 18 as they baited longline gear at night. They brought back
some of the creatures for examination by experts.
Eric Hochberg, curator of the Santa Barbara museum, said the species is usually
found off Baja California and farther south.
The farthest north the species has been reported until this year was off the
coast of Oregon in 1997, said James A. Cosgrove, manager of natural history at
the Royal British Columbia Museum. Before that year, the farthest north it was
seen was near San Francisco, he said.
Until this summer, there have been no other sightings in the north, Cosgrove
said.
"It's unprecedented," he said. "It speaks of a fundamental change
in the ocean along the coast."
The museum is keeping a 6.5-foot, 44-pound Dosidicus gigas in a
formaldehyde tank. The purple-bodied cephalopod with eight sucker-covered arms
and two curly tentacles was caught Oct. 2.
Since news of that discovery was made public, Cosgrove has received seven
reports of sightings since late July of jumbo squid in northwest waters from
Oregon to Alaska. Beside the Sitka catch, the squid were spotted near Yakutat
and Kodiak Island.
"We'll try to get a handle on are they moving north with warmer waters? And
then do they die out as they head north? Or does the cold water constrain their
northward movement?" Hochberg said.
Source: Associated Press