And people say invertebrates are stupid...
NPR science Fridays used to have a squid and octopus sequence that was absolutely amazing.
The ability of these creatures to problem solve is otherworldly. And the actual experiments to prove their abilities are some of the most creative.
The basic thought for the octopi is they are very vulnerable predators that have to be extremely sneaky. Predators on the whole have to be much more creative, but the vulnerability of having to hide in rock and coral formations appears to have taken it up a notch.
All hail the mollusks who are also cephalopods.
Love this stuff.
And I will now relate a story:
Whilst fishing on the North Jetty in Port Aransas Texas, I personally witnessed ye fairly large red-brownish octopus climb out of the water on the rocks on the surfside of the jetty, slither all the way across the jetty to the channel side, and re enter the water. No witnesses or phone camera, I was all business with the fishing. Even while crying out for observers to come hither.
I then explained this to a number of fisherman who asked what the fuss was about and was thereby considered a heretic and sentenced to death. My last request involved going to the Aquarium in Corpus Christi Texas which involved a scholarly conversation with the good biologists that set up the octopus tank. The top of the tank, I found out, was securely sealed shut. Why? The frkn beasts would push the top of their tank open, climb onto the lattice work of wood planks that allowed all the tanks to be serviced, find the blue crab tank, get in and feast! They were found in the tank with a trail of slime leading back to their tank. I was dumbstruck. How in Thor's world did they find the crab tanks, not once, but dozens of times? Did they accidentally take a dip into the tank with sharks and rays? NO.
I was saved from persecution and execution by the good people that went bust at that aquarium.
I will take this to my deathbed and write a sea shanty concerning the event.

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