Bronwyn GIllanders receives funding from the Australian Research Council, Fisheries Research Development Corporation, government and industry investors. She is a member of the South Australian giant ...
Giant cuttlefish breeding in South Australian waters are providing a visual treat for spectators, who are able to witness the marine animals' vibrant displays in numbers not seen in years. Thousands ...
The giant cuttlefish (scientific name Sepia latimanus) has stripes that continuously change, giving the impression of flowing. Scientists have confirmed that this flow of stripes is a camouflage ...
Male cuttlefish do not bluff. When their body language shows they are agitated, they are. This was one of the findings from a study on the giant Australian cuttlefish. Male cuttlefish do not bluff.
Divers fear Australia's giant cuttlefish could be in danger, as anecdotal reports suggest their numbers are declining and surviving animals are displaying strange behaviour. Internationally, the ...
Whyalla Mayor Jim Pollock says the entire breeding ground of the giant Australian cuttlefish in South Australia's Upper Spencer Gulf should be protected from fishing. Only a third of the cuttlefish's ...
Every winter in Spencer Gulf, a large inlet intruding into Australia’s south coast, hundreds of thousands of giant cuttlefish gather to breed. They’re about the size and weight of a corgi, with ...
Scientists fear industrial activity at Point Lowly near Whyalla, including major projects such as the proposed desalination plant for Olympic Dam, will disrupt breeding at the only giant cuttlefish ...
The cuttlefish is often called the chameleon of the sea, but where the land-based version can only change its color, the sepia-squirting, tentacled one can change its skin texture as well as its tint ...
(MENAFN- The Conversation) Australia is home to the world's only known site where cuttlefish gather to mate en masse. From May to August, if you head into the water around Point Lowly, South Australia ...