Duck! Octopuses caught on camera throwing things at each other :marseyoctopus::throw::!marseyoctopus:

For the first time, octopuses have been spotted throwing things --- at each other1.

Octopuses are known for their solitary nature, but in Jervis Bay, Australia, the gloomy octopus (Octopus tetricus) lives at very high densities. A team of cephalopod researchers decided to film the creatures with underwater cameras to see whether --- and how --- they interact.

Once the researchers pulled the cameras out of the water, they sat down to watch more than 20 hours of footage. "I call it octopus TV," laughs co-author David Scheel, a behavioural ecologist at Alaska Pacific University in Anchorage. One behaviour stood out: instances in which the eight-limbed creatures gathered shells, silt or algae with their arms --- and then hurled them away, propelling them with water jetted from their siphon. And although some of the time it seemed that they were just throwing away debris or food leftovers, it did sometimes appear that they were throwing things at each other.

The team found clues that the octopuses were deliberately targeting one another. Throws that made contact with another octopus were relatively strong and often occurred when the thrower was displaying a uniform dark or medium body colour. Another clue: sometimes the octopuses on the receiving end ducked. Throws that made octo-contact were also more likely to be accomplished with a specific set of arms, and the projectile was more likely to be silt.

https://i.rdrama.net/images/16841915117896729.webp

"We weren't able to try and assess what the reasons might be," Scheel cautions. But throwing, he says, "might help these animals deal with the fact that there are so many octopuses around". In other words, it is probably social.

Tamar Gutnick, an octopus neurobiologist at the University of Naples Federico II in Italy, says the work opens a new door for inquiries into the social lives of these famously clever animals. "The environment for these specific octopuses is such that they have this interaction between individuals," she says. "It's communication, in a way."

https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-022-03592-w

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"frick off octokitty" yeets shell

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Are octopuses the ones responsible for all the empty shells on the beach?

*looks like it's mostly crabs and snails

https://shellfish.ifas.ufl.edu/wp-content/uploads/Major-Predators-of-Cultured-Shellfish.pdf

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I love that we're seeing play behavior in insects, octopi. Jordan Peterson has talked about play in rats too :marseyneat:

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>GET THE FRICK OFF MY LAWN AND NEVER COME BACK!!

>Play behavior

World's smartest animal research dramanaut.

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What?

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I love that we're seeing play behavior in insects, octopi.

Octopus in video is having too many other octopuses around and has started throwing dirt on them. Your first interpretation is they are playing instead of the more likely they aren't getting enough space.

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he's a nanny octopus, just wants to play.

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:marseyxd:

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me when the whippersnappers from the Atlantic trespass into R'lyeh.

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