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Jumbo Squid Invasion: "Carnivorous Calamari' Invade San Diego Shores, Spook Divers (VIDEO)

Huffington Post/AP   First Posted: 08/17/09 06:12 AM ET Updated: 05/25/11 02:40 PM ET

Squid Invasion
This March 2005 image provided by the National Marine Fisheries Service shows a beak of a Humboldt squid, also known as a jumbo flying squid, exposed before dissection at the laboratory of the National Marine Fisheries Service in San Diego. The rare squid have returned to the area wreaking havoc on local divers.

SAN DIEGO - Jumbo flying squid -- aggressive 5-foot-long sea monsters with razor-sharp beaks and toothy tentacles -- have invaded the shallow waters off San Diego, spooking scuba divers and washing up dead on tourist-packed beaches.

The carnivorous calamari, which can grow up to 100 pounds, came up from the depths last week and swarms of them roughed up unsuspecting divers. Some divers report tentacles enveloping their masks and yanking at their cameras and gear.

Stories of too-close encounters with the alien-like cephalopods have chased many veteran divers out of the water and created a whirlwind of excitement among the rest, who are torn between their personal safety and the once-in-a-lifetime chance to swim with the deep-sea giants.

The so-called Humboldt squid are native to the deep waters off Mexico, where they have been known to attack humans and are nicknamed "red devils" for their rust-red coloring and mean streak. Those who dive with them there chum the water with bait and sometimes get in a metal cage or wear chain mail to avoid being lashed by tentacles.

The squid hunt in schools of up to 1,200, can swim up to 15 mph and can skim over the water to escape predators.

"I wouldn't go into the water with them for the same reason I wouldn't walk into a pride of lions on the Serengeti," said Mike Bear, a local diver. "For all I know, I'm missing the experience of a lifetime."

The squid are too deep to bother swimmers and surfers, but many longtime divers say they are staying out of the surf until the sea creatures clear out. Yet other divers, including Shanda Magill, couldn't resist the chance to see the squid up close.

On a recent night, Magill watched in awe as a dozen squid with doleful, expressive eyes circled her group, tapping and patting the divers and gently bumping them before dashing away.

One especially large squid suspended itself motionless in the water about three feet away and peered at her closely, its eyes rolling, before it vanished into the black. A shimmering incandescence rippled along its body, almost as if it were communicating through its skin.

But the next night, things were different: A large squid surprised Magill by hitting her from behind and grabbing at her with its arms, pulling her sideways in the water. The powerful creature ripped her buoyancy hose away from her chest and knocked away her light.

When Magill recovered, she didn't know which direction was up and at first couldn't find the hose to help her stay afloat as she surfaced. The squid was gone.

"I just kicked like crazy. The first thing you think of is, 'Oh my gosh, I don't know if I'm going to survive this. If that squid wanted to hurt me, it would have," she said.

Other divers have reported squid pulling at their masks and gear and roughing them up.

Roger Uzun, a veteran scuba diver and amateur underwater videographer, swam with a swarm of the creatures for about 20 minutes and said they appeared more curious than aggressive. The animals taste with their tentacles, he said, and seemed to be touching him and his wet suit to determine if he was edible.

"As soon as we went underwater and turned on the video lights, there they were. They would ram into you, they kept hitting the back of my head," he said.

"One got ahold of the video light head and yanked on it for two or three seconds and he was actually trying to take the video light with him," said Uzun, who later posted a 3-minute video with his underwater footage on YouTube. "It almost knocked the video camera out of my hands."

Scientists aren't sure why the squid, which generally live in deep, tropical waters off Mexico and Central America, are showing up off the Southern California coast -- but they are concerned.

In recent years, small numbers have been spotted from California to Sitka, Alaska and are increasingly being spotted off the San Diego coastline -- an alarming trend that scientists believe could be caused by anything from global warming to a shortage of food or a decline in the squid's natural predators.

In 2005, a similar invasion off San Diego delighted fishermen and, in 2002, thousands of jumbo flying squid washed up on the beaches here. That year, workers removed 12 tons of dead and dying squid.

This summer, the wayward squid have also been hauled up by fisherman in waters off Orange County, just north of San Diego.

Research suggests the squid may have established a year-round population off California at depths of 300 to 650 feet, said Nigella Hillgarth, executive director of the Birch Aquarium at Scripps Institution of Oceanography. Divers this summer have been encountering them at about 60 to 80 feet down, they said.

No one knows how many squid are in the shallow waters, but one biologist estimated they could number in the hundreds, or possibly thousands.

"Usually where there's one squid, there's a lot of squid, so I would assume that there's a good number," said John Hyde, a biologist with the National Marine Fisheries Service in San Diego.

Their presence off the coast -- and the subsequent die-offs -- may occur when their prey moves to shallow waters and the squid follow, and then get trapped and confused in the surf, said Hillgarth, who saw a dying squid on the beach last weekend.

"It was an amazing privilege to touch a creature like that and see how amazingly beautiful it was," she said. "They have these wonderful eyes. ... They look all-seeing, all-knowing."

That's the kind of description that pulls veteran divers such as Raleigh Moody back to the pitch-black water, despite the danger.

"My usual dive buddy, he didn't want to come out," said Moody, as he prepared for a night dive with another friend. "There are some divers (who) just don't want to deal with it and there are some like me that, until they hear of something bad happening, I'm going to be an idiot and go back in the water."

FOLLOW HUFFPOST GREEN

SAN DIEGO - Jumbo flying squid -- aggressive 5-foot-long sea monsters with razor-sharp beaks and toothy tentacles -- have invaded the shallow waters off San Diego, spooking scuba divers and washing up...
SAN DIEGO - Jumbo flying squid -- aggressive 5-foot-long sea monsters with razor-sharp beaks and toothy tentacles -- have invaded the shallow waters off San Diego, spooking scuba divers and washing up...
 
 
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03:38 PM on 07/19/2009
Humans are so ignorant. If we don't change, our species is going to go extinct in the next century.
05:31 PM on 07/18/2009
I LOVE calamari. If these squid are so large, why am I paying $9 for a small plate of it?
02:12 AM on 07/18/2009
Meh. From what I've read, these things won't attack people until people start messing with them. All that "aggressive" reporting is based from when fishermen catch them and butcher them in the boat. Apparently the squid put up a fight and sometimes win. Also, if you go out and dive at night with dozens of 100 pound squid with teeth on their suckers(during feeding time!) you are simply begging for trouble.
01:48 AM on 07/18/2009
Maybe if the Chinese stopped slicing off the fins of sharks to make shark fin soup the natural balance of predator and pray would be in balance.

Recipe for disaster:

Take thousands and thousands of sharks from the ocean.

Cut off their fins.

Throw carcasses, that lack the ability to swim, back into the ocean and have the sink to the bottom and drown.

Take tons of fins back to China and make into a bowl of soup.

Garnish with a dollop of stupidity and you have the perfect recipe for the destruction of OUR oceans.
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mlaiuppa
Pres. Sarcasm Society. Like we need your approval.
01:12 PM on 07/19/2009
They kill whales too.
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ranchero42
Cherished Memories? NRA'll Rifle Thru 'Em
06:11 PM on 07/17/2009
Wake me when the giant Mr. Krabs hit the beach.
04:30 PM on 07/17/2009
First the budget crisis, now confused and pis.sed off squid.

Must be Obama's fault -- again, right?
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Jaxy
Bah! My micro-bio didn't meet your guidelines
01:41 PM on 07/18/2009
Absolutely. According to the winguts, the President's cross-species approval has tanked, too.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rivahcat
You can't teach a dogma new tricks--D. Parker
03:53 PM on 07/17/2009
Jumbo squid are scary enough.. but jumbo FLYING squid??? Remind me to avoid the ocean, please!!

I'll stick to the ones frozen & ready to cook in my local Asian grocery store.
03:30 PM on 07/17/2009
Wow. First the story about the flesh-eating robot, and now an army of giant squid are attacking California. If we could somehow build a huge, mega-robotic-flesh-eating shark to *destroy* the giant squid, now that would be newsworthy. And at this point, if Hugo Chavez turns out to be El Chupacabra, or Rush Limbaugh turns out to be a $*** demon, I won't be surprised. The president obviously needs Buffy the Vampire Slayer's number on speed dial.
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03:16 PM on 07/17/2009
QUITE INTERRUPTING HER!!!!!!!!!!!

Geeez, celebrity Faux newsman thinks it's his story!
And he keeps making false claims about what happened to her and then she has to say...'ummm, no actually' bablablaaa...
Frickin Faux News.
03:05 PM on 07/17/2009
The appetizer bites back!
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PWM
Eisenhower Republican. Liberalism = Liberty
03:02 PM on 07/17/2009
Sorry, I mistook the opening photo for the article for Sarah Palin's unmentionables.
fscuttle
I'd kill for a Nobel Peace Prize
02:31 PM on 07/17/2009
It wasnt that long ago we didnt even have proof that these things existed.Now theyre swarming our beaches.What the heck is going on?
07:15 PM on 07/18/2009
No that was giant squid. Those are the big ones that live deep down with the sperm whale as a main predator. architeuthis dux is it's latin name and the humboldt (what the story's about) is Dosidicus gigas.
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senorlou
12:27 PM on 07/17/2009
If it isn't swarms of jellyfish, it's swarms of squid. It's OK, times are tough. We'll eat them.
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MjaFla
Dear old dad says, Joke 'em if they can't take a F
02:53 PM on 07/17/2009
Ship some to Florida! I have a lemon tree. My family would eat pounds of it!
12:15 PM on 07/17/2009
YIKES! I've been in San Diego oceans twice in the last two weeks!
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JakeHanson
Flying Spaghetti Monster Bless America!
01:41 PM on 07/17/2009
And living here I can say they are sooo dirty...Except for La Jolla Shores/WindnSea.
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jeffp26
11:55 AM on 07/17/2009
Squid love scuba divers fried with Fra Diavolo sauce.