Octopus in den

In this short video we show you a “crafty octopus”. That these animals are very intelligent is now well known to everyone; in this case the octopus he are organized itself with two dens close to each other. But if we carefully observe the video we can think that it is the same den with two exits, the main one (the one with all the grouped shells that the octopus generally uses to protect itself) and the secondary one that could be the “emergency exit”. polpo in tana

Octopus in den - Polpo in tana - Octopus vulgaris - www.intotheblue.it - www.intotheblue.link
Octopus in den – Polpo in tana – Octopus vulgaris – www.intotheblue.it – www.intotheblue.link

The Common Octopus (Octopus vulgaris) is a mollusc belonging to the class Cephalopoda. Octopus vulgaris is one of the most studied of all octopus species and also one of the most intelligent. It is considered cosmopolitan, that is, a global species, which ranges from the eastern Atlantic, extends from the Mediterranean and the southern coast of England, to at least Senegal in Africa. It also occurs off the Azores, Canary Islands and Cape Verde Islands. The species is also common in the Western Atlantic. The common octopus hunts at dusk. Crabs, crayfish, and bivalve molluscs (two-shelled, such as cockles) are preferred, although the octopus eats almost anything it can catch. It is able to change colour to blend in with its surroundings, and is able to jump upon any unwary prey that strays across its path.

Octopus in den - Polpo in tana - Octopus vulgaris - www.intotheblue.it - www.intotheblue.link
Octopus in den – Polpo in tana – Octopus vulgaris – www.intotheblue.it – www.intotheblue.link

Using its beak, it is able to break into the shells of shelled molluscs. Training experiments have shown the common octopus can distinguish the brightness, size, shape, and horizontal or vertical orientation of objects. The octopus uses gills as its respiratory surface. The gill is composed of branchial ganglia and a series of folded lamellae. Primary lamellae extend out to form demibranches and are further folded to form the secondary free-folded lamellae, which are only attached at their tops and bottoms. The tertiary lamellae are formed by folding the secondary lamellae in a fan-like shape. Water moves slowly in one direction over the gills and lamellae, into the mantle cavity and out of the octopus funnel.

Octopus in den - Polpo in tana - Octopus vulgaris - www.intotheblue.it - www.intotheblue.link
Octopus in den – Polpo in tana – Octopus vulgaris – www.intotheblue.it – www.intotheblue.link

The octopus has three hearts, one main two-chambered heart charged with sending oxygenated blood to the body and two smaller branchial hearts, one next to each set of gills. The circulatory circuit sends oxygenated blood from the gills to the atrium of the systemic heart, then to its ventricle which pumps this blood to the rest of the body. Deoxygenated blood from the body goes to the branchial hearts, which pump the blood across the gills to oxygenate it, and then the blood flows back to the systemic atrium for the process to begin again.

(extract from Wikipedia)

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

 

(Visited 17 times, 1 visits today)

You might be interested in

Post A Comment For The Creator: Fanino Cirivasi