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  • chambered nautilus eggcases or Emperor nautilus egg cases, Nautilus pompilius, or  the largest nautilus species, giant nautilus shell, Nautilus repertus. Nautiluses reproduce by laying eggs. Gravid females attach the fertilized eggs to rocks in shallow waters.
    002894.jpg
  • cutaway view of chambered nautilus shell or Emperor nautilus shell, Nautilus pompilius. The living animal occupies the outer shell chamber. A tissue-lined tube of shell, the siphuncle, connects the body to older chambers. Gas in the sealed chambers balances the animal's growth, providing neutral buoyancy.
    002889.jpg
  • chambered nautilus or Emperor nautilus, Nautilus pompilius, or Palau nautilus, Nautilus belauensis, a living fossil, having survived ralatively unchanged for millions of years, inhabits depths of about 300 m, rising to around 100 m at night for feeding, Indo-Pacific Ocean (c)
    002887.jpg
  • cutaway view of chambered nautilus shell or emperor nautilus shell, Nautilus pompilius. The living animal occupies the outer shell chamber. A tissue-lined tube of shell, the siphuncle, connects the body to older chambers. Gas in the sealed chambers balances the animal's growth, providing neutral buoyancy.
    0029403-MUS.jpg
  • chambered nautilus shell or Emperor nautilus shell, Nautilus pompilius, or  the largest nautilus species, giant nautilus shell, Nautilus repertus. The living animal occupies the outer shell chamber. A tissue-lined tube of shell, the siphuncle, connects the body to older chambers. Gas in the sealed chambers balances the animal's growth, providing neutral buoyancy.
    002890.jpg
  • chambered nautilus or Emperor nautilus, Nautilus pompilius, or Palau nautilus, Nautilus belauensis, a living fossil, having survived ralatively unchanged for millions of years, inhabits depths of about 300 m, rising to around 100 m at night for feeding, Indo-Pacific Ocean (c)
    002888.jpg
  • chambered nautilus or Emperor nautilus, Nautilus pompilius, or Palau nautilus, Nautilus belauensis, a living fossil, having survived ralatively unchanged for millions of years, inhabits depths of about 300 m, rising to around 100 m at night for feeding, Indo-Pacific Ocean (c)
    002886.jpg
  • crusty nautilus shell, Allonautilus scrobiculatus, the rarest and most unusual of living nautilus, note can see through the inner spiral of the shell (open umbilicus), found only in the Solomon Islands and New Guinea
    002891.jpg
  • crusty nautilus shell, Allonautilus scrobiculatus, the rarest and most unusual of living nautilus, note can see through the inner spiral of the shell (open umbilicus), found only in the Solomon Islands and New Guinea
    0029405-MUS.jpg
  • chambered nautilus eggcases or Emperor nautilus egg cases, Nautilus pompilius, or the largest nautilus species, giant nautilus shell, Nautilus repertus. Nautiluses reproduce by laying eggs. Gravid females attach the fertilized eggs to rocks in shallow waters.
    0029408-MUS.jpg
  • chambered nautilus or Emperor nautilus, Nautilus pompilius, or Palau nautilus, Nautilus belauensis, a living fossil, having survived ralatively unchanged for millions of years, inhabits depths of about 300 m, rising to around 100 m at night for feeding, Indo-Pacific Ocean (c)
    0029402-MUS.jpg
  • chambered nautilus or Emperor nautilus, Nautilus pompilius, or Palau nautilus, Nautilus belauensis, a living fossil, having survived ralatively unchanged for millions of years, inhabits depths of about 300 m, rising to around 100 m at night for feeding, Indo-Pacific Ocean (c)
    0029400-MUS.jpg
  • chambered nautilus shell or Emperor nautilus shell, Nautilus pompilius, or the largest nautilus species, giant nautilus shell, Nautilus repertus. The living animal occupies the outer shell chamber. A tissue-lined tube of shell, the siphuncle, connects the body to older chambers. Gas in the sealed chambers balances the animal's growth, providing neutral buoyancy.
    0029404-MUS.jpg