Octopus mom protects her eggs for an astonishing 4-1/2 years
WASHINGTON (Reuters) – If someone were to create an award for “mother of the year” in the animal kingdom, a remarkably dedicated eight-limbed mom from the dark and frigid depths of the Pacific Ocean might be a strong contender.
Scientists on Wednesday described how the female of an octopus species that dwells almost a mile below the sea surface spends about 4-1/2 years brooding her eggs, protecting them vigilantly until they hatch while forgoing any food for herself.
It is the longest known egg-brooding period for any animal, they wrote in the scientific journal PLOS ONE.
The scientists used a remote-controlled submarine to monitor the deep-sea species, called Graneledone boreopacifica, off the coast of central California.
They tracked one female, recognizable by its distinctive scars, that clung to a vertical rock face near the floor of a canyon about 4,600 feet (1,400 meters) under the surface, keeping the roughly 160 translucent eggs free of debris and silt and chasing off predators.
A deep-sea octopus (Graneledone boreopacifica) is shown on a ledge near the bottom of Monterey Canyo …
This mother octopus never left the oblong-shaped eggs – which during the brooding period grew from about the size of a blueberry to the size of a grape – and was never seen eating anything. The octopus progressively lost weight and its skin became pale and loose. The researchers monitored the octopus during 18 dives over 53 months from May 2007 to September 2011.
Bruce Robison, a deep sea ecologist at the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute in Moss Landing, California, said this species exhibits an extremely powerful maternal instinct.
“It’s extraordinary. It’s amazing. We’re still astonished ourselves by what we saw,” Robison said.
Most octopus females lay a single set of eggs in a lifetime and die shortly after their offspring hatch. The newborn of this species are no helpless babies. The long brooding period enables the hatchlings to come out of their eggs uniquely capable of survival, emerging as fully developed miniature adults able to capture small prey.
At this tremendous depth, there is no sunlight – the only light comes from bioluminescent sea creatures – and it is very cold – 37 degrees Fahrenheit (3 degrees Celsius). “It may seem nasty to us, but it’s home to them,” Robison said.
During the brooding period, the mother octopus seemed to focus exclusively on the welfare of the eggs.
“She was protecting her eggs from predators, and they are abundant. There are fish and crabs and all sorts of critters that would love to get in there and eat those eggs. So she was pushing them away when they approached her,” Robison said.
“She was also keeping the eggs free from sediment and was ventilating them by pushing water across them for oxygen exchange. She was taking care of them,” Robison added.
This species measures about 16 inches (40 cm) long and is a pale purple color with a mottled skin texture. It eats crabs, shrimp, snails – “pretty near anything they can catch,” Robison said.
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(Reporting by Will Dunham; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)
IMAGE: Handout of a deep-sea octopus is shown on the ledge near the bottom of Monterey Canyon. A deep-sea octopus (Graneledone boreopacifica) is shown on a ledge near the bottom of Monterey Canyon, California, about 1,400 meters (4,600 feet) below the ocean surface in this undated handout photo provided by Eurekalert.org July 30, 2014. REUTERS/Robinson et all/Eurekalert.org/Handout via Reuters
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