Cephalopod fin


Cephalopod fins, sometimes known as wings, are paired flap-like locomotory appendages. They are found in ten-limbed cephalopods as well as in the eight-limbed cirrate octopuses and vampire squid. Many extinct cephalopod groups also possessed fins. Nautiluses and the more familiar incirrate octopuses lack swimming fins. An extreme development of the cephalopod fin is seen in the bigfin squid of the family Magnapinnidae.
Fins project from the mantle and are often positioned dorsally. In most cephalopods, the fins are restricted to the posterior end of the mantle, but in cuttlefish and some squid they span the mantle's entire length.
Fin attachment varies greatly among cephalopods, though in all cases it involves specialised fin cartilage. A fin may be attached to the internal shell or shell remnant, to the opposite fin, to the mantle, or a combination of these.
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Tail and secondary fins

Certain squid species possess a tail, which is an extension of the body past the fins. The tail may be said to start at "the point where a hypothetical line, continuous with the broad posterior edge of the fin, crosses the midline of the body". This tail may be lost with age or remain through sexual maturity. Grimalditeuthis and larval Chiroteuthis are unusual in that they possess a pair of flotation devices or "secondary fins" attached to the tail. The vampire squid also has two pairs of fins during a brief period of its ontogeny, and secondary fins have been reported in the extinct Trachyteuthis.
'' with "secondary fins" supported on a well-developed tail

Fin morphology and placement

Cephalopod fin morphology is highly variable. The fins may be large and muscular, extending for the entire length of the mantle, or greatly reduced and restricted to the mantle's posterior end. Fin placement in cephalopods is often termed normal, terminal, or subterminal, depending on their position with respect to the muscular mantle.
Eight major fin shapes can be distinguished among the Decapodiformes: sagittate, rhomboid, circular/elliptical, lanceolate, ear-shaped, ribbed, lobate, and skirt-like.