at the bottom of the ocean
-- You can find squid most anywhere, including the shallows, depending on the species. --
just a beak
no, but squids have becks to eat
No. It is the other way around squids eat lobsters. They can suck the meat out of a lobster leaving an intact shell.
Yess.yes yes yes No, They do not. Squids and octopus' have abandoned their respective shells over millions of years of evolution in a substitution for speed and maneuverability.
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.
Mollusks do not have an external skeleton; instead, they have a hard, protective shell made primarily of calcium carbonate. This shell serves as a form of defense and support. In some mollusk species, such as octopuses and squids, the shell is reduced or absent, but the mantle tissue still secretes the shell material when present.
Shell-less mollusks include: Squids, cuttlefish, and octopuses (class Cephalopoda) Nudibranchs & slugs (class Gastropoda) A+=slug
they are called bloopers:)
squid
Tentacles