Sunday, December 27, 2015

Time to protect the amazing octopus

Octopuses are extraordinary and fascinating animals and one of the most intelligent of all invertebrates. Scientists are increasingly producing evidence that they are sentient creatures. Yet they are given little or no legal protection from suffering. But, at last, that is starting to change.
Octopuses, squid and cuttlefish are a type of animal called cephalopods. A new law governing the use of animals in experiments in the EU will, for the first time, provide some protection for these animals in the same way as for vertebrate animals such as monkeys and mice. And about time too.

Fascinating creatures

So what do we know about these illusive animals of the sea? Well, a few interesting basic facts: there are over 300 known species of octopus, they have four pairs of arms and three hearts!
The challenging environment in which cephalopods live and their lifestyle means that they need to be capable of complex and flexible behaviours. For example, as they are active predators octopuses need to explore, remember their environment and understand the behaviour of other animals including their prey.
It is therefore not surprising that studies have shown that octopuses easily learn new things, simply by observing other octopuses. They can also solve problems they would not encounter in the wild such as unscrewing the lid of a container to get at prey inside.

Tool users

One of the most interesting recorded natural behaviours of octopuses is their use of tools. Researchers only recently observed veined octopuses in Australia using halved coconut shells as tools, by scooping them from the seabed, carrying with them and later using them as a shelter when needed. This is the first reported case of tool use by an invertebrate animal.

Thwarting predators

Common octopuses have a wide array of techniques they use to avoid or thwart potential predators. If there is a place to hide they can squeeze their soft bodies with no internal or external skeleton through impossibly small cracks and crevices where predators can’t follow. Or they can choose to jet off at speed by expelling water through their mantles. They can also improve their chances of escape by obscuring an attacker’s view and dulling its sense of smell by releasing a cloud of black ink.
If all else fails, they have beak-like jaws which can deliver a nasty bite, and venomous saliva which is mostly used for subduing prey. Even if a predator manages to bit off one of their eight arms they can re-grow it later with no permanent damage!

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