Mimic octopus

> 10 years ago
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japie
japie
NSW
7146 posts
NSW, 7146 posts
3 Nov 2010 9:18am
This bugger makes a chameleon look like an amateur!

nebbian
nebbian
WA
6277 posts
WA, 6277 posts
3 Nov 2010 6:45am
Wow!

It's even figured out how to mimic posts!

www.seabreeze.com.au/forums/General-Discussion/Chat/Enough-conspiracys-Here-come-the-undisputed-facts/?whichpage=2



Cool looking cephalopod all the same.
japie
japie
NSW
7146 posts
NSW, 7146 posts
3 Nov 2010 11:31am
Just goes to show how much I take in!
getfunky
getfunky
WA
4485 posts
WA, 4485 posts
3 Nov 2010 11:14am
nebbian said...

Wow!

It's even figured out how to mimic posts!

www.seabreeze.com.au/forums/General-Discussion/Chat/Enough-conspiracys-Here-come-the-undisputed-facts/?whichpage=2



Cool looking cephalopod all the same.


Crafty bugger - probably impersonating an admin... or posting vexatious threads under 'Waxpus'.


My kids have been asking me to watch that vid every second day this week. Truly amazing creature.
byf
byf
WA
518 posts
byf byf
WA, 518 posts
3 Nov 2010 6:50pm
What the hell runs on two legs down there that it is mimicking? Looks like a road runner. Maybe another mimic occy is chasing him mimicking a coyote.
barn
barn
WA
2960 posts
WA, 2960 posts
3 Nov 2010 7:58pm
the best part is the occy doesn't realise its doing that, as smart as they are, they don't live long enough to learn this and its all just evolutionary instinct. Make each shape for each situation..


An occy out mimicked.. by a superior foe.


japie
japie
NSW
7146 posts
NSW, 7146 posts
4 Nov 2010 9:54am
^^ far out! Not much joy on the lower scales of the food chain!

I read a whole heap of stuff about them on Wikepedia. Die after thier first root and the female ceases to eat after laying her eggs and often eats her own tentacles to sustain herself whilst caring for the eggs.

And yes, very short life span in most cases. Also this:

In some countries, octopuses are on the list of experimental animals on which surgery may not be performed without anesthesia. In the UK, cephalopods such as octopuses are regarded as honorary vertebrates under the Animals (Scientific Procedures) Act 1986 and other cruelty to animals legislation, extending to them protections not normally afforded to invertebrates.[12]
getfunky
getfunky
WA
4485 posts
WA, 4485 posts
4 Nov 2010 11:24am
Crikey! I wonder if chooks eat pidgeons? Probably - they'd eat anything!

Poor Occy may have stood a chance if not distracted by the diver.

Apparently cuttlefish are rated as smarter than pigs, so are 2nd after (most) humans.

One of the best parts of that vid was crusty the clown doing the voice-over.
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