What's the difference between arms and tentacles? (2024)

What's the difference between arms and tentacles? (1)

Octopuses are famous for their eight sucker-covered arms, whereas squids, from giant Architeuthis dux to the appetizer-size critters served at restaurants, swim with even more appendages: eight arms and two tentacles. So, what's the difference between these different types of boneless limbs?

Squids, octopuses and their hard-shelled nautiloid relatives are all big-brained members of the class Cephalopoda. With the exception of ancient nautiloids, all living cephalopod species fall under the category of either eight-legged Octopodiformes or 10-legged Decapodiformes, and have muscular, sucker-laden arms. However, only squids, cuttlefish, bobtail squids and other members of Decapodiformes have tentacles, and only vampire squid sport stringy appendages called filaments, according to a paper published in 2017 in the Journal of Molluscan Studies. The difference between all of these cephalopods' limbs, it turns out, largely comes down to shape and sucker placement.

"The basic difference is arms have a line of suckers going down them, whereas tentacles don't have suckers until you get to the tentacular clubs, which are the kind of large part at the end," Morag Taite, a postdoctoral research associate at Aberystwyth University in Wales, told Live Science.

Related: What's the biggest group of animals ever recorded on Earth?

Broadly speaking, suckers help cephalopods adhere to or sense the world around them. For instance, having eight sucker-covered arms enables octopuses to walk, grab prey, hang onto surfaces such as coral reefs, and "taste" through a sense called chemotactility. In contrast, the more free-swimming squids use their tentacles primarily for hunting. Their tentacular clubs can also feature hooks — thick, ensconced in muscle and curved, sometimes as sharply as a fisherman's hook — which many squids use to snare prey they encounter in open water, or the water column.

"In the water column, they'd be feeding on things like shrimp, which are quite fast, so they need to grab them," said Taite, who employs DNA barcoding to study cephalopod evolution and family trees. "And the hooks also help them to pull the prey to them, whereas the octopods would mostly use their arms for walking."

Some squids, like colossal squid (Mesonychoteuthis hamiltoni) — which weigh a whopping 1,100 pounds (500 kilograms), almost twice as heavy as giant squid — have hooks that line both their arms and tentacles. In the case of colossal squid, which live in the cold waters of the Southern Ocean around Antarctica, the arm hooks are rigid and set into dense musculature, whereas the tentacular hooks can rotate in place. Despite that degree of armament, colossal squid are ambush predators, preferring to sit and wait for unsuspecting prey to come close enough to be grabbed. The strategy isn't restricted to squids of their size or habitat, either — Hawaiian bobtail squid (Euprymna scolopes), which average just over an inch in length, bury themselves in the sand of shallow waters, where they wait to attack shrimp, prawns and even small octopuses with their tentacles.

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What's the difference between arms and tentacles? (2)

Even stranger than hook-filled clubs are the lengthy filaments boasted by vampire squid (Vampyroteuthis infernalis). Vampire squid are the only cephalopods that spend their entire lives in the ocean's lightless oxygen minimum zone, which occurs about 656 to 3,280 feet (200 to 1,000 meters) under the water's surface, according to the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute in California. Because vampire squid live at such extreme depths, they're challenging to study — researchers discovered the function of their filaments only in 2012, as detailed in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.

By using remotely operated vehicles to monitor the dietary habits of wild vampire squid and the Monterey Bay Aquarium's dark, cold room to observe the habits of collected specimens, the team learned that vampire squid use their two filaments to catch decaying matter that drifts down from shallower regions of the ocean. Vampire squid, which are named for the cape-like webbing between their arms (not their dietary habits), are more closely related to modern octopuses than to squids and spend most of their time floating on ocean currents, waiting to detect a snack with the filaments that complement their eight webbed arms.

Related: What is the toothiest animal on Earth?

What's the difference between arms and tentacles? (3)

"They can put the filaments out, and there are these hairs on them so they can move the food up towards their mouth," Taite said. Despite possessing two filaments, vampire squid typically deploy only one filament at a time, according to the 2012 study. After they retract a filament and drag it across their arms, which secrete a mucus that binds to the foods, vampire squid gobble up the mucus-coated morsel.

Nautiloids, which have striking shells and have changed very little since they emerged more than 440 million years ago, have the most tentacles of any living cephalopod, though the appendages are morphologically different from those of their distant relatives, squids and octopuses. The "living fossils" sport close to 90 tentacles replete with adhesive ridges, rather than suckers, which they use to trap prey.

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Meanwhile, like squid, cuttlefish have eight arms and two tentacles, which they rapidly deploy to catch fast-moving prey like shrimp and fish, according to a 1984 study published in the journal Behavioral Processes. And while the suckers of an octopus boast 10,000 chemoreceptors each, allowing it to taste what it touches, a cuttlefish's suckers contain only about 100 each, according to a 1996 study published in the journal Marine and Freshwater Behaviour and Physiology.

Given this variety of both form and function, Taite said it isn't really possible to compare the benefits of cephalopod tentacles and arms.

"I wouldn't say it's more like pros and cons," she said. "You can't really put them against each other because they live in different environments, so they need different methods [of survival]."

Originally published on Live Science.

What's the difference between arms and tentacles? (4)

John Arnst

Live Science Contributor

John Arnst is a freelance science writer and editor based in Washington, DC. He writes about every corner of life sciences he can get his hands on, and much of his work can be found in the magazine for the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, where he was a staff writer for four years. He has degrees in English literature and biology from the University of Florida and two very vocal black cats.

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What's the difference between arms and tentacles? (2024)

FAQs

What's the difference between arms and tentacles? ›

An arm is a limb that's covered with suction cups from beginning to end. A tentacle has suckers only at its end, which is usually wide and heavy.

What is the difference between an arm and a tentacle? ›

Generally, arms have suckers along most of their length, as opposed to tentacles, which have suckers only near their ends. Barring a few exceptions, octopuses have eight arms and no tentacles, while squid and cuttlefish have eight arms (or two "legs" and six "arms") and two tentacles.

What are the 2 major anatomical differences between the arms and tentacles? ›

The arms differ from the tentacles in having many more and much bigger suckers, and hooks that do not rotate.

What is the function of the tentacles and arms? ›

The primary function of the arms is prey capture and manipulation, but they are also involved in behavioral displays, locomotion stabilization, and reproduction. The tentacles are specialized for prey capture and possess a unique capacity for fast elongation (Kier, 1996, 2016).

What is considered a tentacle? ›

In zoology, a tentacle is a flexible, mobile, and elongated organ present in some species of animals, most of them invertebrates. In animal anatomy, tentacles usually occur in one or more pairs. Anatomically, the tentacles of animals work mainly like muscular hydrostats.

Are jellyfish arms called tentacles? ›

The body of a jellyfish exhibits radial symmetry and is divided into three main parts: the umbrella, the oral arms (around the mouth) and the stinging tentacles.

Are arms and tentacle the same in the class Cephalopoda? ›

Limbs. Typically, arms, tentacles, or a combination of the two will extend from the cephalopod's head. The arms are distinct from tentacles in that they're completely lined with suction cups. Tentacles, on the other hand (or arm?), sometimes terminate in rounded clubs with suction cups and sometimes with hooks.

Why are octopus arms not tentacles? ›

Arms have suction cups the entire length of the limb and can perform finer, more complex actions compared to tentacles. With eight sucker-lined arms and, in some cases, a pair of tentacles, a cephalopod has a really tight grip. But how a cephalopod maintains that grip differs between squid and octopus.

What is the function of the arms? ›

What is the purpose of the arm muscles? The muscles in your upper arm and forearm allow you to move your arms, hands, fingers and thumbs. Different muscles help with precise movements, such as threading a needle, as well as big movements like throwing a ball.

What are the 3 functions of the tentacles? ›

Tentacles help the animal to move, feed, grasp, and gather sensory information. They are sensory organs sensitive to touch, vision, or the smell or taste of specific meals or threats in diverse ways. For example - Tentacles are found in cuttlefish, sea anemones, bryozoa, jellyfish, snails, and squid.

How many of the arms are called tentacles? ›

Squids are cephalopods that have both arms and tentacles. The arms are shorter limbs covered with suction cups. The two tentacles are longer with suction cups only at the ends.

What are tentacles in the human body? ›

varied organ found in many animals and used for palpation and manipulation. A tentacle is a part of the body of an animal or plant that can move freely. They are like arms.

Is the human tongue a tentacle? ›

The tongue is part of a group of biological structures, including tentacles and the elephant's trunk, which preserve volume and consist of muscles that are orthogonal in three dimensions (Kier & Smith 1985).

What is the difference between a limb and a tentacle? ›

These arms and tentacles have strong suckers that work just like suction cups. While arms have suction cups the entire length of the limb, suction cups on tentacles are found only near the end of the limb.

What is a tentacle in the military? ›

(figurative) An insidious reach or influence. the tentacles of the criminal underworld. (figurative) Something like a zoological limb. quotations ▼ (UK, military, historical) An officer employed to drive out to troops and transmit back requests for support via a special radio link.

Are they octopus arms or legs? ›

Octopuses possess six arms and two legs; people sometimes mistakenly refer to them as having eight tentacles. The eight-limbed mollusks even have a preference when it comes to which arm they use for eating. Disturbingly, in rare situations, they've been known to consume their own arms.

What is the meaning of tentacle? ›

1. : any of various elongate flexible usually tactile or prehensile processes borne by invertebrate animals chiefly on the head or about the mouth. 2. : something that resembles a tentacle especially in or as if in grasping or feeling out. corruption spreading its tentacles.

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