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Aya Kato

3 Comments Permalink 11 Apr 2007 @ 06:33AM
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Blanket octopus defense mechanism
Pink Tentacle says: Most octopi squirt thick clouds of black ink to confuse predators. This video from a Japanese TV quiz show, however, shows a type of Tremoctopus, or blanket octopus (murasakidako in Japanese), employing a different technique. The video explains that when threatened, the octopus unfurls a giant sheet of webbing that trails behind like a cape. The webbing breaks apart rather easily when attacked — much like a lizard’s tail — and it gets wrapped around the predator’s face, giving the octopus a chance to flee.



Aerin

Aerin wrote:

One day that poor thing is going to get sucked into a submarine engine. No Capes!

11 Apr 2007 02:52PM
joe

joe wrote:

haha, yer seriously. Thats a big ass cape! Also watching the video I cant work out where the octopus ends and the webbing begins.

Looks pretty cool cruising through the water though, must admit

13 Apr 2007 12:02PM
Aerin

Aerin wrote:

Ah, see that's how they suck you in. Capes look really cool, and then they turn on you. You end up catching it in the face, on a tree, or a jet engine. Trust me, I speak from personal experience.

13 Apr 2007 03:04PM


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