Id on octopus i am looking into

simple

Vampyroteuthis
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Oct 10, 2007
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Hi, this is a picture of an octopus that i might buy, but i rather not buy until i get an id on it. Unfortunately, as is usual, the seller doesn't know were it came from. I attached a picture of it. The seller is in California, so it might be from around there but i don't see any eye spots that would suggest it's a bimac.
Thanks
 

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yea i thought that eye looks funny, they say that they have 10 in stock so i could ask for one who doesn't have the curlicue look though i don't know how well they will follow my instructions..Does anyone have any clue what species it is? I certainly dont..
 
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ok the seller gave me more information on it.
"brown octopus
no blue eyespots
72-76 degress
eats snails, clams, chopped shrimp
the head is about the size of a plum"
my guess is vulgaris, but thats just a guess.
 
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simple;106551 said:
ok the seller gave me more information on it.
"brown octopus
no blue eyespots
72-76 degress
eats snails, clams, chopped shrimp
the head is about the size of a plum"
my guess is vulgaris, but thats just a guess.

no word on what ocean it came from? Vulgaris isn't native to California...

It also looks pretty mature to me, and a mantle the size of a plum seems small for a vulgaris... The coloring doesn't look red enough to be rubsecens

I'm not sure I have that great an eye for judging maturity, but if I'm right, if all 10 are the same size and batch, they could all be near the end of their lives (particularly with the curled arms)... Although Mr. Octopus, DHyslop's bimac, for example, lived a good long time with the "full adult" look (and that picture does remind me of pics of Mr. Octopus except for the lack of the bimac spots.)
 
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well this is just the general picture the seller uses, but he says it is not the exact one i will get. He told me they have only had it for two weeks, and that it comes out in the day, and sometimes at night as well. He doesn't know were it came from but they keep it in relatively high temperatures, so my guess is that it is from the Atlantic, or maybe Indo-Pacific, but im not very knowledgeable at identifying octopuses so i wanted to get some expert input, well really any input at all would help.
 
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Simple, four things to consider but no real help.

If a nocturnal octopus is out during the day, there is a good chance it has a week or less to live (this has been true of all the mercs posted as well as from my own experience).

The lack of webbing and plum sized mantle could indicate adult pygmy, however, if the color is true (if you take out the yellow from the eyes and mantle and make it more red it does not look quite so odd), it is not one I have seen on mine but the faint pattern is close and the curled up arm tips are common even at a young age and the quick tapering legs (the most suggestive) and eyes all are pygmy positive.

This may be just a photo they took at one time or another of an octopus and not really representative of any they have in stock (very common). How do they know it is out at night? (Just a thought about how attentive their answers might be, I don't know of any pet stores that have a night staff ...)

Vulgaris are considered nocturnal BUT one grad student paper and a couple of misc articles have mentioned that they naturally forage early morning and early evening rather than being true night time active animals. Virtually everyone has been able to intereact with suspected Vulgaris after coming home from work. The two at Mote were out in the open all afternoon (I kept checking in on them during our tour - can you tell I want one? ;>)
 
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i guess it could indicate an adult pygmy but plum sized mantle is pretty big for a pymgy isn't it? It is a possibility that the picture they have of it at the moment isn't even the same species. I will ask if they can get me a picture of one of the ones that are currently in stock, but i do not know if they will be willing to.
 
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That would be way big for a pygmy. The eyes do appear very large though, so perhaps it's an exceptional catch. If so, it's probably due to expire very soon.

I asked if it was native to or captured in California and this is what they told me
"yes, California, Mexico, and Florida. the head is about the size of a plum, and the length from tentacles from tip to head is about 8 inches."

Doesn't sound right.
 
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i still think vulgaris. Water temp seems too hot for California, but reasonable for Florida or maybe the gulf of Mexico. The guy says the species is "brown octopus" which is no help at all..
 
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Animal Mother;106590 said:
That would be way big for a pygmy.

I asked if it was native to or captured in California and this is what they told me

The only cephalopod I can think of off the top of my head that is native off California, Mexico, and Florida is Architeuthis dux.

"We must fall back upon the old axiom that when all other contingencies fail, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth." - Sherlock Holmes

:rolleyes:

(actually, I think Vampyroteuthis infernalis, Arogonauta argo, and some deep-water squids the MBARI folks spy on are in both Atlantic and Pacific open ocean, but it was funnier before I though of that)
 
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haha, yes thats probably what it is..
my guess is that the seller isn't very knowledgeable at all about what species it is or were it came from, so he is just stating where "brown octopuses" are found in general, which probably includes several species that have been commonly called by this name.
 
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That octo is from Antarctica

I am sorry to say, but I seriously doubt they are going to sell you that species of octopus. That picture is of an Antarctic octopus taken by researcher Seth White who has been down there. You can find his post featuring that picture at www.sethwhite.org/animals.htm ..scroll a little ways down the page. My guess, from the uniserial suckers and where it is found, is that it is Pareledone sp. (perhaps P. charcoti?) Anyhow, that particular picture is completely uninformative as to what you will be sold. No antarctic species is being kept at 72-76 F.
 
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good eye, Taollan, I completely missed the uniserial suckers! (Of course, I bought into the idea that they took a picture of the actual octopus they're selling hook, line, and sinker... :sink: )
 
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