at the bottom of the ocean
-- You can find squid most anywhere, including the shallows, depending on the species. --
Their "shell" is actually a thin rod that runs the length of their bodies on the inside and stiffens them.
awesomeness it is actually true! a squid's shell is called awesomeness
Squid do not have shells, but they do have skin. The squid's close cousin does have a shell, though.
They don't have one.
no, but squids have becks to eat
just a beak
No. It is the other way around squids eat lobsters. They can suck the meat out of a lobster leaving an intact shell.
octopus & squids
Their ancestors had internal shells, but now all the squid has left is a chitin-like substance called a "pen," and is used as a flexible back bone.
The mantle of a squid is to cover and protect the squid's body.
Squids are invertebrates, therefore they do not have spines. An earlier form of the squid had a shell, but this is obviously no longer present. However, a structure called the pen remains, part of the old shell. This is what helps the squid to maintain its structure.
Shell-less mollusks include: Squids, cuttlefish, and octopuses (class Cephalopoda) Nudibranchs & slugs (class Gastropoda) A+=slug
they are called bloopers:)
Tentacles
squid
Invertebrate having a soft unsegmented body usually enclosed in a shell.