Strange octopus found in Southern California

Image of female Argonaut. Photo from Cabrillo Marine Aquarium, taken by Gary Florin.

Photo by: Brittany Murray / Staff Photographer Daily Breeze

 
A rarely seen species of octopus was found this week by fisherman off the coast of San Pedro, California. The baseball-sized female Argonaut (aka: paper nautilus), pictured in the image above, normally lives in tropical and subtropical waters. She is now making a new home in the Cabrillo Marine Aquarium in San Pedro. Not much is known about this mysterious species since they are difficult to maintain in captivity.
 
They are unusual among octopuses because the females have an outer shell that is used to store eggs as well as trap air bubbles allowing them to float on the surface of the ocean. Males do not have shells and are only about an inch long. To fertilize eggs, the males place a sperm sac on a tentacle and insert it into the female's shell. In the process, the tip of the male's tentacle is chopped off. According to aquarist Jeff Landesman, "You can tell how many times she's been fertilized by how many tentacles tips are trapped in her shell."
 
Similar to other octopuses that we have talked about in prior blogs (Octopus Smarts Caught on Video & The Ultimate Halloween Costume), Argonauts can produce camouflage. Moreover, some research suggests they may be able to learn from their environment, a sign of intelligence.

More like this

Knobby Argonaut, Argonauta nodosa Also, what's Brian Switek doing, writing about cephalopods? He's supposed to be writing about dinosaurs ! But first impressions can be deceiving. In truth, as I later learned from Klug, the paper nautilus is not a close relative of today’s pearly nautilus, nor…
The courtship rituals of the spider Harpactea sadistica start innocently enough, with a dance and a hug. The male spider taps the female gently with his front legs and embraces her. But from that point onwards, things for the female go rapidly downhill. The male bites her and she becomes passive,…
I rather like this illustration I ran across in some reading. It's a bit risqué, and reminded me of some ukiyo-e…the kind of thing you don't usually expect to find in a biology journal. This line drawing was made from a photograph of a male H. lunulata (shaded) copulating with a female. The arrow…
Argonauts are odd animals. They rather resemble a nautilus, but they aren't particularly closely related to them; their closest cephalopod relatives are the octopuses. Females have a thin shell and scoot about in the water column, but the poor males are all dwarfs, rarely seen, with no shell.…

Interesting! :)

is'nt it octopie not octopus's?

No - it's octopodes...

But octopuses is also acceptable...