Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 May 2009
Post-traumatic regeneration of arms in Cephalopods is a common occurrence. It was described by Aristotle and, in more modern times, by Steenstrup (1856). Féral (1978) summarizes the information on regeneration of arms, tentacles and suckers in cephalopods. He reports only one case, experimental, involving a Sepiolidae species, namely Sepiola atlantica.
This paper gives an account of regeneration of the copulatory arm in three wild-caught male sepiolid squids, two of which were Sepietta oweniana (d'Orbigny, 1841) and one Sepiola ligulata Naef, 1912 (Sepiolidae: Sepiolinae). The copulatory arm, or hectocotylus, is the left dorsal arm in Sepiolinae. It represents a most important means of species identification (Naef, 1923; Bello, in press). The squids were caught by bottom trawl in the southern Adriatic Sea during routine sampling. Measurements and observations were made on preserved specimens.