Ascarosepion


Ascarosepion is a genus of cuttlefish inhabiting the coastal regions of the Indian Ocean and East Pacific. The genus varies wildly in size, from the two species of small, colorful cuttlefish formerly classified in the genus Metasepia, to the largest species of extant cuttlefish, the giant cuttlefish.

Taxonomy

Ascarosepion was described in 1884 by French malacologist Alphonse Trémeau [de Rochebrune] in 1884. He diagnosed it as possessing an "ovoid body, with narrow fins. Arms very short but robust which end abruptly in pointed tips. Suckers of varied size set on 3-4 rows. Buccal membrane narrow and wrinkled. The thin, elliptical cuttlebone resembles to a sandal in shape, with a rugose and convex dorsal surface and very flat bottom; two enormous calcareous "wings", acuminated at the front and very wide at the rear." The name is derived from a combination of the Greek words askaros and sepion; the type species, A. verreauxi, was collected off Sydney, and the holotype stored in "Mus. Paris", presumably the National [Museum of Natural History, France|Natural History Museum]. Subsequent authors treated Ascarosepion as a synonym of Sepia for over a century.
Metasepia was described from a type specimen collected in the Arafura Sea at a depth of 28 fathoms on October 9 1874, as part of the Challenger expedition. It is deposited at Natural [History Museum, London|The Natural History Museum] in London. The name is presumably derived from a combination of meta- and sepia.
A 2023 paper revived several genera of cuttlefish and elevated some subgenera of Sepia to full genus level based on molecular sequencing; this study recovered Ascarosepion as a distinct clade of cuttlefish with the two species previously within Metasepia nested within its lineage. Genus Ascarosepion was determined to range from the coast of Tasmania and South Africa up to the Persian Gulf and the Red and Yellow Seas. This classification scheme has been accepted by various databases, such as WoRMS, SeaLifeBase, GBIF, and iNaturalist.

Species

accepts the following species: