The coconut octopus, Amphioctopus marginatus, was named for its behavior of carrying around coconut shells for shelter. The octopus lacks the hard shell that other mollusks are known for, so it uses these objects as body armor to protect itself from predators. It’s also called the veined octopus because of the branching vein-like pattern on its skin. It has white and blue-colored glowing suckers.
Watch it “walk” with its coconut shells:
Now watch it curl up into its portable “home”:
Sea hares are “naked” mollusks, too. They lack an outer shell but have a small remnant of a shell inside their bodies. This is an evolutionary link; it tells us that even though sea hares lost their shells over the course of evolution, they’re still related to other mollusks.
~Adlysia
This is really cool.
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Their suckers have an illuminated appearance for which they are also known as blue glowing coconut octopus; but in reality, they are not bioluminescent.
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Thanks for that information! Just fixed it 😉
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