The amazing octopuses that make mobile homes out of coconut
The amazing octopuses that make their own mobile homes... from coconut shells
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/ ... lters.html
These incredible pictures show octopuses making their own mobile homes from discarded coconut shells - in what scientists believe is the first 'intelligent' use of tools by an invertebrate.
Researchers studied more than 20 of the eight-legged creatures in Indonesia, watching how they recycled the shell halves thrown into the sea by humans.
The animals did much more than simply crawl under a convenient shell. They collected coconut halves of the right size, stacked two together, and transported them under their bodies over distances of up to 20 metres.

Hide and seek: A veined octopus, Amphioctopus marginatus peeps out of a coconut shell it has collected

Sea legs: A veined octopus crawls along the ocean floor holding one half of a coconut shell. Scientists filmed the creatures displaying the unusually sophisticated behavior
The shell 'bowls' were then unloaded and placed with their open ends together to form a closeable lair.
To carry the shells, the octopuses developed a comical form of locomotion, dubbed 'stilt walking' by the researchers.
The soft-bodied creature would first spread itself over a consignment of coconut shells, making its eight tentacles rigid.
It would then raise the whole assembly to amble on eight 'stilts' across the sea floor.
This made what the octopuses were doing very different from the actions of hermit crabs, which house themselves in empty mollusc shells, the scientists pointed out.
'There is a fundamental difference between picking up a nearby object and putting it over your head as protection versus collecting, arranging, transporting (awkwardly), and assembling portable armour as required,' said Dr Mark Norman, from the Museum Victoria in Melbourne, Australia.
Colleague Julia Finn, who also took part in the research, added: 'While I have observed and videoed octopuses hiding in shells many times, I never expected to find an octopus that stacks multiple coconut shells and jogs across the sea floor carrying them.

Sophisticated: The octopuses were seen performing elaborate routines to pick up and transport their shells. Their 'intelligent' use of the shells is very different to the actions of creatures such as hermit crabs
'I could tell that the octopus, busy manipulating coconut shells, was up to something, but I never expected it would pick up the stacked shells and run away. It was an extremely comical sight - I have never laughed so hard underwater.'
The research is reported in the journal Current Biology.
'Ultimately, the collection and use of objects by animals is likely to form a continuum stretching from insects to primates, with the definition of tools providing a perpetual opportunity for debate,' the scientists wrote.
'However, the discovery of this octopus tiptoeing across the sea floor with its prized coconut shells suggests that even marine invertebrates engage in behaviours that we once thought the preserve of humans.'
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/ ... lters.html
These incredible pictures show octopuses making their own mobile homes from discarded coconut shells - in what scientists believe is the first 'intelligent' use of tools by an invertebrate.
Researchers studied more than 20 of the eight-legged creatures in Indonesia, watching how they recycled the shell halves thrown into the sea by humans.
The animals did much more than simply crawl under a convenient shell. They collected coconut halves of the right size, stacked two together, and transported them under their bodies over distances of up to 20 metres.

Hide and seek: A veined octopus, Amphioctopus marginatus peeps out of a coconut shell it has collected

Sea legs: A veined octopus crawls along the ocean floor holding one half of a coconut shell. Scientists filmed the creatures displaying the unusually sophisticated behavior
The shell 'bowls' were then unloaded and placed with their open ends together to form a closeable lair.
To carry the shells, the octopuses developed a comical form of locomotion, dubbed 'stilt walking' by the researchers.
The soft-bodied creature would first spread itself over a consignment of coconut shells, making its eight tentacles rigid.
It would then raise the whole assembly to amble on eight 'stilts' across the sea floor.
This made what the octopuses were doing very different from the actions of hermit crabs, which house themselves in empty mollusc shells, the scientists pointed out.
'There is a fundamental difference between picking up a nearby object and putting it over your head as protection versus collecting, arranging, transporting (awkwardly), and assembling portable armour as required,' said Dr Mark Norman, from the Museum Victoria in Melbourne, Australia.
Colleague Julia Finn, who also took part in the research, added: 'While I have observed and videoed octopuses hiding in shells many times, I never expected to find an octopus that stacks multiple coconut shells and jogs across the sea floor carrying them.

Sophisticated: The octopuses were seen performing elaborate routines to pick up and transport their shells. Their 'intelligent' use of the shells is very different to the actions of creatures such as hermit crabs
'I could tell that the octopus, busy manipulating coconut shells, was up to something, but I never expected it would pick up the stacked shells and run away. It was an extremely comical sight - I have never laughed so hard underwater.'
The research is reported in the journal Current Biology.
'Ultimately, the collection and use of objects by animals is likely to form a continuum stretching from insects to primates, with the definition of tools providing a perpetual opportunity for debate,' the scientists wrote.
'However, the discovery of this octopus tiptoeing across the sea floor with its prized coconut shells suggests that even marine invertebrates engage in behaviours that we once thought the preserve of humans.'
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/ ... lters.html
- Ironshroom

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- Posts: 384
- Joined: Mon Jun 29, 2009 4:37 pm
Fascinating stuff!
i wonder if life is starting to get more complex at such an alarming rate that things like this will be popping up more frequently...i certainly hope so.
i wonder if life is starting to get more complex at such an alarming rate that things like this will be popping up more frequently...i certainly hope so.
- Lucidlemondrop

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- Posts: 7529
- Joined: Sat May 30, 2009 7:37 am
Amazing how species manage to do such remarkable things that just can't be written off as instinct but rather use of cognition, IMO.
I think Octopi look very much like alien species would (in my mind), there are so many creatures in the seas and ocean! It is just a whole nother' world there.
I guess coconut shells are part of the "octopuses gardens."
I think Octopi look very much like alien species would (in my mind), there are so many creatures in the seas and ocean! It is just a whole nother' world there.
I guess coconut shells are part of the "octopuses gardens."
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