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Suckers
suckers

 

Octopus beak
octopus beak

 

 

breathing
breathing

squirting ink
inking

sea star
sea star

 

 

 

GIANT PACIFIC OCTOPUS

INTRODUCTION
also in this section:
Octopus reproduction
Jim Cosgrove's Octopus Adventures

octopus

The octopus is a mollusc and belongs to the same group as snails, chitons, abalone, limpets, clams, scallops, oysters and mussels. The octopus also belongs to a smaller group of molluscs called the cephalopods, which means "head-foot"; it is so named because its "feet" (arms) are attached to its head. Squid and cuttlefish are also cephalopods. These molluscs have been roaming the oceans for more than 450 million years.

squid cuttlefish
squid cuttlefish

octopusOctopuses live in all the worlds' oceans but not in fresh water. They tend to be small in warm tropical waters and larger in colder waters, such as the North Pacific. The largest octopus in the world, the Giant Pacific Octopus, lives in the coastal waters of British Columbia. The largest Giant Pacific Octopus ever caught weighed about 270 kg (600 pounds) and had an arm span of almost 10 metres (33 feet). But most are much smaller: females seldom exceed 25 kg (55 pounds) and males average less than 40 kg (88 pounds).

suckersAn octopus has eight arms attached to the head around the mouth. Each arm has rows of suckers along the length of its arms. The octopus has many nerves in the arms and suckers; it can actually taste with its suckers. The Giant Pacific Octopus has two rows of suckers per arm and may have as many as 1,600 suckers in all.

The octopus has no bones. The only hard part of its body is a beak made of a material like your fingernails. The beak, located in the mouth, is used to kill prey and bite it into pieces. An Octopus's bite is poisonous; the Blue-ringed Octopus of Australia has killed humans by biting them when defending itself.

camouflage

camouflageThe octopus has a well-developed brain and excellent eyesight. It can instantly change the colour and texture of its skin to match its surroundings. This camouflage is a major method of protection from predators.


jetting backwards

jettingThe body of the octopus, called the mantle, looks like a bag and it moves as the octopus breathes. Inside the mantle are the stomach and all the other organs including 3 hearts. A heart at the end of each of the two gills pumps blood through the gill and the third heart pumps the blood through the body; Octopus blood is pale blue. When the octopus breathes in, water flows over the gills and fills the mantle. When it breathes out the water is forced out a tube call the siphon. If an octopus is trying to escape a predator it can force water through the siphon rapidly and jet itself backwards. Octopuses have been known to travel many kilometres using jet propulsion. An octopus can also temporarily blind an attacker by squirting ink at it.

Most octopuses live only one or two years. The Giant Pacific Octopus is one of the longer lived species: the female can live to about 3.5 years and the male to approximately 4 years.

crabA female octopus will lay thousands of eggs and protect them until she dies. The Giant Pacific Octopus lays about 50,000 eggs and tends them for about 6 months. During this time she does not eat but spends all her time protecting the eggs from other animals such as sea stars and crabs. She will only produce one nest in her life. When the babies hatch they are not giants like their mother but about the size of a grain of rice. They rise up to the surface layer of the ocean and stay there for about six weeks. When they grow large enough to survive on the bottom of the ocean the juvenile octopuses drift down again. It will take almost 3 years for them to grow to be as big as their parents.

PART 2: Octopus Reproduction
PART 3: Jim Cosgrove's Octopus Adventures

 

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