Most of us think of the brain as a single command center that controls everything the body does. Octopuses work differently.
"Our findings are the first to demonstrate that invertebrates can use mirrors to understand their environment to find prey." ...
An octopus distributes its nervous system in a way that no vertebrate does: only about one-third of its neurons sit inside ...
Dr Bryce Stewart said he thought this octopus bloom could be different and the creatures may stay in UK waters Marine ...
The discovery of a blue octopus about the size of a golf ball has delighted marine biologists and the public with its rarity – and its big-eyed cute factor. The octopus was found 5,800 feet deep in ...
The new species, named Microeledone galapagensis, has a blue hue, which is believed to be the rarest color in nature.
Scientists discovered a tiny blue octopus in the Galápagos deep sea, revealing how much of the ocean remains unexplored.
Science | Updated: March 13, 2024 | Originally Published: October 31, 2013 These bizarre creatures have been around for hundreds of millions of years, and for humans, they’ve inspired horror, ...
Scientists recently uncovered fossilized jawbones of Nanaimoteuthis haggarti – a massive, kraken-like octopus that roamed Earth about 72 million years ago.According to a recent study published in the ...
An octopus distributes roughly two-thirds of its neurons not in its brain but across its eight arms, giving each limb a ...