Giant Squid Gets Makeover Before Exhibition In Paris Museum

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
History to prettify a giant squid along with a coelacanth, a rare fish known as the "living fossil".Six metres (20 feet) long -- not
counting its tentacles -- and weighing in at 80 kilos (180 pounds), the squid, nicknamed "Wheke", hangs from a workshop during a recent
visit, suspended on a pulley."It's the real thing!", enthused Christophe Gottini, who has been primping and plumping inert creatures at the
museum for nearly half-a-century."Aside from the eyes, which are not right at all," he added disapprovingly, knowing he still had time to
largest grow up to 18 metres -- lived off the coast of New Zealand, where it was caught in 2000.Stuffing an animal skin with a foam rubber
replica -- the classic method -- doesn't work for squids, so Gottini opted for plastification, a technique perfected in Italy.Next up is the
coelacanth, not one of the prettiest creatures on the planet.They stink too, exuding a foul oil that makes them inedible.Related to
in 1938 an angler caught one off the coast of South Africa.Because that specimen matched fossils dating back several hundred million years,
it became known as the "living fossil"
It was a further two decades before any more coelacanths were discovered.Other species have now been discovered, showing that the fish has
coelacanths are considered a kind of gap species between fish and the earliest tetrapods, which climbed out of the oceans to become Earth's
first terrestrial vertebrates.Giant squids, by contrast, are almost certainly the largest of invertebrates, or animals without a
tentacles are lined with two rows of suckers, each with razor-sharp rings of chitin, the stuff of which insect exoskeletons are made.They
latch onto prey with their feeding tentacles, pulling victims towards a powerful beak.Like other squid species, A
dux can squirt jet-black ink to scare off or confuse predators.Wheke and his nameless companion will be on display in Paris at the museum's
Grand Hall of Evolution from April 3 to January 5, 2020.(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by TheIndianSubcontinent
staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)Get the latest election news, live updates and election schedule for Lok Sabha Elections 2019
on TheIndianSubcontinent.com/elections
Like us on Facebook or follow us on Twitter and Instagram for updates from each of the 543 parliamentary seats for the 2019 Indian general
elections.