Cutie.
An octopus disguise has three main elements—color, texture, and posture. Learn more:https://t.co/sku4q9tGuT
Mimic octopus (Thaumoctopus mimicus) This mimic octopus (Thaumoctopus mimicus) lost several arms in battle. An octopus with fewer than eight arms is a rare view. As soon as an arm is lost or damaged, a regrowth process kicks off to make the limb whole again. Once an arm is regrown, it is basically as good as new. by GONNA_DIVE
Vampire Squid turning itself out
mimic octopus
Everybody’s got something to hide except me and my mimic…
Octopus hunts down stone fish, one of the most venomous animals in the ocean
Footage of the incredible moment an octopus bravely hunts down an extremely venomous stone fish off the coast of Egpyt.The video, filmed by a diver in June this year, shows the large octopus chasing down the creature, apparently unconcerned by its lethal stings.
The filmer later wrote online: “Why does the stone fish not use its incredibly poisonous stings?
“Maybe the octopus is immune to this lethal predator or he is intelligent to a point that he knows how to catch the stone fish, avoiding the dangerous stings.”
True to its name, it impersonates a variety of other animals on the fly, morphing from an octopus to a banded sole to a lionfish to a sea snake. But this is no random assemblage of impressions: All of these creatures are toxic or venomous. The mimic octopus isn’t just a copycat—it’s a copycat that’s evolved a strategy far more brilliant than would appear at first glance.
Read more about this week’s Absurd Creature.
(via wired)
Source: Wired










