Cephalopods, which include squids and octopuses, vary enormously in size. The smallest are only about 1 centimetre (0.39Â in) long and weigh less than 1 gram (0.035Â oz) at maturity, while the giant squid can exceed 10 metres (33Â ft) in length and the colossal squid weighs close to half a tonne (1,100Â lb), making them the largest living invertebrates. Living species range in mass more than three-billion-fold, or across nine orders of magnitude, from the lightest hatchlings to the heaviest adults. Certain cephalopod species are also noted for having individual body parts of exceptional size.
Cephalopods were at one time the largest of all organisms on Earth, and numerous species of comparable size to the largest present day squids are known from the fossil record, including enormous examples of ammonoids, belemnoids, nautiloids, orthoceratoids, teuthids, and vampyromorphids. In terms of mass, the largest of all known cephalopods were likely the giant shelled ammonoids and endocerid nautiloids, though perhaps still second to the largest living cephalopods when considering tissue mass alone.