Nautiluses
Nautiluses are marine mollusks in the cephalopod family Nautilidae and the sole living representatives of the subclass Nautiloidea. They are distinguished by an external spiral shell divided into gas-filled chambers and a soft body occupying the final chamber. They possess numerous slender tentacles instead of suckers and lack the ink sacs and advanced eyes seen in other cephalopods.
The chambers are connected by a siphuncle, allowing the animal to regulate buoyancy by adjusting gas and
Nautiluses inhabit Indo-Pacific waters, often around reefs and rocky slopes at depths of about 100–300 meters.
Reproduction is sexual. Females lay eggs in the substrate; embryos develop within the eggs and hatch as
Conservation concerns stem from slow growth, late maturity, and vulnerability to overharvesting for shells, as well