Octopus
Facts
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Fishy Facts about Octopus
- Scientific Name: Octopus gibbsi
- Color: An expert in camouflage, octopus can change color to mirror
their surrounding
- Family: Octopodidae
- Captive Diet: Crabs, Mussels and Herring
- Unusual Traits: Many people believe Octopus are as smart as cats, they
also have a good capacity for learning.
- Octopus have great eyesight. And are masters of disguise. Right in front
of your eyes, they change color to match the surroundings and can even
change the texture of their
skin to further camouflage himself.
- Octopus are great escape artists; an adult Octopus can squeeze through
a hole the size of a 10-cent coin.
- Octopus are part of the Mollusc family, more closely related to Pipis
and Mussel than fish.
- Octopus are generally nocturnal
- Octopi have no shell, eight arms, a pouch-shaped body, and two large,
highly developed eyes. Their prey (crabs, lobsters, and other shellfish)
is caught by the sucker-bearing arms and pulled into the web of tissue
at the base of the arms, paralyzed and partially digested by a poisonous
salivary secretion, and chewed by the horny, beak-like jaws and the radula, or tooth.
- An octopus can change color rapidly due to pigment cells in the skin
that the animal can expand and contract by muscular action. Waves of
color may sweep over an octopus, apparently reflecting its emotional
state.
- The body of an octopus has no bones and is very flexible, making it
difficult to contain. An octopus with an arm span of 30 cm can pass
though a hole less than 1 cm in diameter.
- The largest of the 600 species of octopus is the Octopus dofleini, a
bottom dwelling hunter found on the Pacific Coast of Canada. Mature
males average about 23kg with an arm span of 2.5m, but one specimen,
reported in 1957, was 9.6m in diameter and weighed an estimated 272kg.
- An octopus has three hearts.
- The octopus learns very quickly. Offered a closed glass jar containing
a live lobster, it took one octopus only three tries to learn how to
remove the stopper.
- One octopus can learn by watching another. At the Statzione Zoologica
in Naples Italy, an untutored octopus was placed in a tank where it
could watch another being trained to choose between red and white balls.
Offered the same choices the untrained octopus chose correctly almost
every time.
- The blue ringed octopus, found around Australia and parts of Southeast
Asia, carries a neurotoxin so potent that its venom could cause the
paralysis, and even death, of 10 adult humans.
- In December 1993, scientists in the submersible Alvin were astonished
to find, at 2500m depth, two octopi apparently mating. This seemed
bizarre because they were both males...and they were two different
species.
- The 'vampire squid of the infernal depths' (Vampyroteuthis infernalis)
is a strange animal halfway between octopus and squid. First collected
in 1903, a typical 20cm-long specimen will have eyes 3cm across and is
thought to drift slowly in the depths, almost like a jellyfish.
- The squid is one of the most highly developed invertebrates, and swims
by expelling water in jets. It has 10 arms, two of which can seize prey,
a well-developed nervous system and eyes very similar to those of
humans.
- On Nov. 2, 1878 the largest reported specimen of giant squid ran
aground in Thimble Tickle Bay, Newfoundland. It weighed 2.2 tons, its
body was six meters long, and one of its tentacles was 10.6m long.
- Squid are the main food of sperm whales. Squid beaks are not easily
digested and are often found in the stomachs of captured or stranded
sperm whales. Finds of 5,000 to 7,000 squid beaks are not uncommon.
- In 1977 Malcolm Clarke, a British specialist in sperm whales,
estimated that the world's 1.5 million sperm whales would consume about
100 million tons of squid per year. The total human squid fishery in
1994 was about 90 million tons.
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