View Full Version : Newbie with octo questions


April
Feb 10th, 2006, 11:35pm
Hi all,
I recently purchased an octopus from my LFS. It had been there for about a month and was eating well. She seems to think it is an octopus cyaneuse. Googling that doesn't get me much. Are there any specifics to this species that I should know?

BTW, her answer as to why she thought it was this species was due to where she believes it was captured, and it looked like the pic. I don't know what pic. It was something she found in a book. Anything else I can tell you about it for a more positive ID?

tonmo
Feb 11th, 2006, 04:36am
Hi April,

Welcome to TONMO.com! Your best bet will be to post a picture of your octo... it will be hard for folks here to try to provide an ID without an image. But you've come to the right place! :smile:

April
Feb 11th, 2006, 12:17pm
Are there any particular spots I should try to get, such as underneath, or eyes, or whatever? I know on seahorses the identifying marks are the head, chest, and color patches. What are the indentifying marks for octopusses? Also, would some sort of size marker help?

monty
Feb 11th, 2006, 12:54pm
:welcome: to TONMO, I'm sure some of our folks can help identify your octo...

mucktopus
Feb 11th, 2006, 01:01pm
The most useful shots are whole body and mantle (body sac) shots from above or the side. It's difficult to ID an octopus from the sucker view, so in most cases pics of the animal glued to the side of the tank aren't hugely informative.

April
Feb 11th, 2006, 01:12pm
OK, I'll see what I can do. Is there a link somewhere that tells me how to post pics?

Graeme
Feb 13th, 2006, 10:54am
You can distinguish octopus species by the suckers though. Although it's not exactly foolproof! Eledone cirrhosa only have one row of suckers on their arm, for instance.
You can post pictures by going into the picture galleries, and following the directions. It's very easy, as long as you save a version of you picture as a Jpeg although it should be that already!

Graeme

mucktopus
Feb 13th, 2006, 11:10am
True- but I was just considering the role of suckers in identifying the common aquarium species- all of which have two rows of suckers (unless Eledone do show up sometimes?). The placement of enlarged suckers can help ID octos if you're having trouble telling the difference between very similarly shaped and colored octos, but that's not likely to be a huge problem here.

The sucker shot is very useful though when trying to sex the octo.

Graeme
Feb 13th, 2006, 11:20am
Hmm, I doubt Eledone would end up as a private collection animal (unless potential owner has plenty of rooM!) as, even if it's not a big octopus, it's far from small, compared to others! I dunno if you can buy them as pets. You're right, though, mucktopus.

Graeme

mucktopus
Feb 13th, 2006, 12:17pm
Hmm, I doubt Eledone would end up as a private collection animal
Graeme


Phew! I thought I was out of the loop on what people were trying to keep!

Andy Lister
Feb 18th, 2006, 09:55am
They'd be ace to keep though... very sociable. I've kept 6 together before and they all got on very very well.

You'd need a pretty impressive chiller though, especially in the US; Greame... you could probably be ok for temp being in the worlds coldest place... slightly ahead of me here in Manc! Haha