Tentacles can refer to the elongated flexible organs that are present in some animals, especially invertebrates, and sometimes to the hairs of the leaves of some insectivorous plants. Usually, they are used for feeding, feeling and grasping. Anatomically, they work like other muscular hydrostats.
Tentacles in marine animals
The phylum mollusca includes many species with muscular hydrostats in the form of tentacles and arms (octopuses do not have tentacles: they have arms). Tentacles are longer than arms and usually have suckers at their tips only. Squids and cuttlefish have eight arms like octopuses, and also two tentacles, which is one good way to distinguish squids from octopuses.
Cnidarians, which include among others the jellyfishes, are another phylum with many tentaculated specimens. Cnidarians often have huge numbers of cnidocytes on their tentacles. Cnidocytes are cells containing a coiled thread-like structure called nematocyst, which can be fired at potential prey.
Many species of the jellyfishlike ctenophores have two tentacles, while some have none. Their tentacles have adhesive structures called colloblasts or lasso cells. These cells burst open when prey comes in contact with the tentacle; sticky threads released from each of the colloblasts will then capture the food.
Bryozoa ("Moss animals") are tiny creatures with a ring of tentacles surrounding the mouth.
tentacles eat beichener
Tentacles in mammals
The star-nosed mole, Condylura cristata, possesses nasal tentacles which are mobile and incredibly sensitive, helping the animal to find its way about the burrow and detect prey.
Tentacles in plants
In carnivorous plants, tentacles refer to the stalked glands of the upper surface of the leaves. On a sundew plant, they are hairlike projections with a drop of nectarlike glue which attract insects. When an insect is captured, the tentacles bend inward and the leaf rolls together as shown in the picture. When the insect is captured, the tentacles secrete digestive enzymes to dissolve and engulf the insect.
Tentacles in cultural context
The great differences between humans and the tentacle-bearing mollusca have led to tentacles being associated with inhumanity and disgust in legend and fiction. For examples, see:
- Tentacle rape
- Purple Tentacle (see Day of the Tentacle)
- Cthulhu