Page authors: Michael Vecchione, Richard E. Young, Tristan Strange
Walvisteuthis jeremiahi is the most recent species to be described in this genus. All members of the genus are very similar and difficult to tell apart. They are all short and plump with no trace of a tail. W. jeremiahi is distinguished from its close relative W. rancureli by statistical differences in counts and measurments (comparison of species is found on the Walvisteuthis page).
A Walvisteuthis with:
Tentacles


Figure. Tentacular clubs of the holotype of W. jeremiahi, male, 57 mm ML. Top - Oral view of the right club with distal tip damaged. Bottom - Ventral view of part of the left showing a near-profile view of the large hooks. Tips of two arms also visible. Photographs by M. Vecchione.
Arms
Head
Mantle
Fins
Photophores

Figure. Ventral view of W. jeremiahi, paratype, male, 44 mm ML with mantle cavity exposed. Note the absence of visceral and ocular photophores. Also note the posterior termination of the mantle and fins without any trace of a "tail." Photograph by M. Vecchione ??
Gladius

Figure. Ventrolateral view of the posterior gladius of W. jeremiahi, paratype, male, 44 mm ML showing the dorsally directed rostrum (arrow). Photograph by M. Vecchione.
Table of counts and measurements (from Vecchione, et al., 2015).

Type Locality - Gulf of Mexico at 27.8°N, 86.4°W.
Geographical Distribution - Presently known only from the Gulf of Mexico and Gulf Stream waters of the western North Atlantic.
Vecchione, M., Sosnowski, A. and Young, R. E. 2015. Walvisteuthis jeremiahi n. sp. (Mollusca: Cephalopoda), an onychoteuthid squid from the Gulf of Mexico. Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington, 128(2): 164-175. doi:10.2988/0006-324X-128.2.164