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Barbary Coast Dive Club Newsletter p3 |
[Image courtesy of Roy Caldwell of UC Berkeley]
Biologist discovers 2 species of octopus attempting
to walk One species wraps six of its legs around itself in a tight ball as it jogs backwards across the sea bed on the other two, somewhat like a little green video game alien trying to avoid being eaten or shot. The other holds six arms up in frozen, crooked poses like tree branches as it moves on two arms that seem to act like mini conveyor belts. The Bay Area biologist who discovered the strange behavior suspects it may be a clever way for the animals to disguise themselves from predators while on the move. "They are able to do two things at once, camouflage and walk, which is fairly unique for an octopus," said Christine Huffard a UC Berkeley graduate student who has been studying the creatures for nearly a decade. Huffard first spotted a walking octopus years ago while assisting another scientist studying coral reef recovery in Indonesia. She was diving with a film crew who captured the bizarre behavior and let Huffard use the footage for her research. The Indonesian octopus is known to local divers as the coconut octopus because it likes to hide in the coconut shells that litter the sea bed. Huffard thinks the animals may be wrapping their arms into a ball in an attempt to imitate a rolling coconut to avoid catching the eye of a shark, sting ray or scorpion, while on the move. "It would be completely possible that it is camouflaged as a coconut," Huffard said. Normally, octopuses either crawl along using several arms sprawled around their body and their suckers to pull and push themselves along, or they swim. The walking behavior is faster than crawling and slower than swimming. But two-legging it may have the considerable advantage of keeping the octopus hidden while still allowing it to get around at a reasonable speed instead of creeping at a snail's pace to avoid being conspicuous. Walking on two legs is generally reserved for animals with skeletons, and it had been thought that the opposition of muscle against rigid bones was required for this kind of locomotion. The octopuses apparently use opposing bands of muscle and a rolling motion that carries a bend down the arms like a wave to accomplish the feat. "Understanding behavior like this could usher in a new frontier of `soft' robotics," in contrast to the rigid robots common today," Full said in a release from UC Berkeley. watch the video at: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/science/2005-03/Huffard_public.html
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updated 3/15/05 |