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Abdopus capricornicus is a species of octopus in the family Octopodidae, and is often also referred to as Octopus capricornicus. [2] This octopus is native to the Great Barrier Reef [1] and is often found throughout the Indo-West Pacific Ocean.
Abdopus horridus, the Red Sea octopus or common reef octopus, is a species of octopus in the genus Abdopus from the western Indian Ocean. [2] It occurs in the western Indian Ocean and the Red Sea . It has a small body and long arms with a complex skin sculpture and pigmentation pattern on the body which it uses to camouflage itself.
The major neurotoxin component of the blue-ringed octopus is a compound originally known as "maculotoxin"; in 1978, this maculotoxin was found to be tetrodotoxin, [17] a neurotoxin also found in pufferfish, rough-skinned newts, and some poison dart frogs; the blue-ringed octopus is the first reported instance in which tetrodotoxin is used as a ...
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One species, however, was seen exhibiting behavior that was not only uncharacteristically social but almost romantic. Called the Larger Pacific Striped Octopus species exhibits rare social and ...
Mimic octopus showing typical pattern. The mimic octopus was first discovered off the coast of Sulawesi, Indonesia in 1998 on the bottom of a muddy river mouth. [5] [6] It has since been found to inhabit the Indo-Pacific, ranging from the Red Sea and Gulf of Oman in the west to New Caledonia in the east, and Gulf of Thailand and the Philippines in the north to the Great Barrier Reef in south.
Octopus Emerges from Reef Camouflage. Scientists have discovered what may be a completely new species of octopus-- and it's absolutely adorable. On February 27th, ...
The Caribbean reef octopus lives in warm waters around coral reef environments and grassy and rocky sea beds. Their biogeographic regions are as follows: the Nearctic region, Neotropical region (Central and South America), oceanic islands and the Pacific Ocean. The Caribbean reef octopus lives in hidden, rocky lairs that are difficult to locate.