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Mimic Octopus. By Taylor Kaiser 4 th Block. What is a mimic octopus?. Scientific name : Thaumoctopus mimicus A mimic octopus is a variety of octopus closely related to the wonderpus. Where are they found?.
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Mimic Octopus By Taylor Kaiser4th Block
What is a mimic octopus? • Scientific name: Thaumoctopusmimicus • A mimic octopus is a variety of octopus closely related to the wonderpus
Where are they found? • This creature was discovered in 1998 off the coast of Sulawesi in Indonesia on the bottom of a muddy river mouth.
What is the scientific classification of the mimic octopus? • Kingdom: Animalia • Phylum: Molluska • Class: Cephalopoda • Order: Octopoda • Family: Octopodidae • Genus: Thaumoctopus • Species: Thaumoctopusmimicus
What are physical characteristics of mimic octopi? • 60 centimeters across • Usually brown and white in color (but can change resulting from mood or environment)
What is unique about the mimic octopus? • Mimic octopi are unique because of their amazing skill camouflaging themselves. • These octopi take their camouflage to an extreme by actually contorting their bodies into the shape of, and then actually behaving like various other sea creatures.
What do mimic octopi eat? • Mimic octopi feed on the bottom of the tropical estuaries in which they live. • They search the sea floor for small fish and crustaceans to eat.
Mimic Octopus Behaviors • These are some examples of the mimic octopus’ ability to expertly imitate other animals. • Can you guess what animal it is mimicking?
StarFish What Animal? This octopus has hidden three of it’s arms so that it looks like a sea star.
Flounder What Animal? The octopus has positioned itself so that it looks almost identical to a flat fish such as a flounder.
SeaSnake What Animal? Part of this octopus is inside of its hole so it looks to be a snake.
Lionfish What Animal? In this photo, the octopus looks like a lionfish.
StingRay What Animal? This octopus looks like a ray.
Bibliography http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2001/09/0920_octopusmimic.html http://marinebio.org/species.asp?id=260 http://www.advancedaquarist.com/2007/4/fish