Callistoctopus macropus

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Atlantic white-spotted octopus
Octopus macropus.jpg
Callistoctopus macropus
Scientific classification
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C. macropus
Binomial name
Callistoctopus macropus
(Risso, 1826)
Synonyms
  • Octopus alderii Verany, 1851
  • Octopus didynamus Rafinesque, 1814
  • Octopus frayedus Rafinesque, 1814
  • Octopus granosus Blainville, 1826
  • Octopus leschenaultii d'Orbigny, 1826 (dubious synonym)
  • Octopus longimanus Férussac, 1839 in Férussac & d'Orbigny, 1834–1848
  • Octopus macropodus SanGiovanni, 1829
  • Octopus macropus Risso, 1826
  • Octopus verrilli palliata Robson, 1929
  • Polypus macropus (Risso, 1826)
  • Tremoctopus scalenus Hoyle, 1904

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Callistoctopus macropus, also known as the Atlantic white-spotted octopus, white-spotted octopus,[1][2] grass octopus or grass scuttle, is a species of octopus found in shallow areas of the Mediterranean Sea, the warmer parts of the eastern and western Atlantic Ocean, the Caribbean Sea, and the IndoPacific region. This octopus feeds on small organisms which lurk among the branches of corals.

Description

Callistoctopus macropus grows to a mantle length of 20 cm (8 in) with a total length of 150 cm (59 in). The first pair of arms are a metre or so long, and are much longer than the remaining three pairs. The arms are all connected by a shallow web. This octopus is red, with white blotches on its body, and paired white spots on its arms. When it is disturbed, its colour becomes more intense, deimatic behaviour which may make it appear threatening to a potential predator.[3]

Distribution and habitat

Populations of Callistoctopus macropus form a species complex found in the Mediterranean Sea, the temperate and tropical Atlantic Ocean and the Caribbean Sea. It is also present in the Pacific and Indian Oceans. It lives near the shore at depths down to about 17 m (56 ft). Its favoured habitat is sand, rubble or seagrass meadows, and it sometimes buries itself under the sand.[3]

Ecology

Callistoctopus macropus

Callistoctopus macropus is more fastidious in its diet than is the common octopus (Octopus vulgaris), a species with which it shares some of its range and which feeds by day.[4] Callistoctopus macropus, by contrast, feeds by night.[3] Its method of feeding is to move from one clump of branching coral to another, often Acropora or Stylophora spp.. The octopus wraps its mantle around a coral head and probes with its arms among the branches, searching for the small fish and invertebrates that seek protection there. It has been found that a number of groupers (family Serranidae) and other predatory fish associate with the octopus when it is feeding, pouncing on small organisms that are flushed from the coral head by the octopus.[5]

For many years, the breeding habits of this octopus were not known. Then a female was observed attaching short-stalked eggs, measuring 4 by 1.2 mm (0.16 by 0.05 in), to a hard surface forming a sheet of eggs. The female then brooded the eggs, caring for them by aerating them and keeping them clean. The female octopus stopped feeding at the time the eggs were laid and died soon after they had hatched, as is common among octopus species. The planktonic larvae which emerged from the eggs were each about 5.5 mm (0.2 in) in length with short, seven-suckered arms. They fed on zooplankton such as crustacean larvae.[3][6]

References

  1. Norman, M.D. 2000. Cephalopods: A World Guide. ConchBooks.
  2. Bouchet, P. (2014). Callistoctopus macropus (Risso, 1826). Accessed through: World Register of Marine Species at http://www.marinespecies.org/aphia.php?p=taxdetails&id=534558 on 2015-02-01
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  • Norman M.D. & Hochberg F.G. (2005) The current state of Octopus taxonomy. Phuket Marine Biological Center Research Bulletin 66:127–154