- Source: Octopus californicus
Octopus californicus (commonly the North Pacific bigeye octopus or orange bigeye octopus) is an octopus in the family Octopodidae. It is provisionally assigned to the genus Octopus, but some scholars have concluded it belongs in other genera. O. californicus was first documented by S. Stillman Berry in 1911.
Description
Octopus californicus is medium-sized and has a body up to 14 cm in diameter, with arms up to 30.5 cm in length; it has a mantle length of around 140 millimeters and maximum total length of 40 centimeters. It is soft-skinned, with large eyes, a rough body, and star shaped patches on the skin. Its diet is composed of fish, shrimp, and crabs.
Reproduction
The eggs of O. californicus incubate for a maximum of ten months. They hatch looking like miniature adults, with no juvenile stage. Females spawn around 100 to 500 eggs at once.
Distribution
Octopus californicus live in the northeastern Pacific Ocean, between Baja California and the Gulf of Alaska. The species has also been reported near Russia and in the Sea of Japan. They live between 100 and 900 meters, making them a deep sea species.
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Octopus (genus)
- Octopus californicus
- Octopus (genus)
- List of Latin and Greek words commonly used in systematic names
- Halibut
- San Diego-La Jolla Underwater Park
- Centrophoridae
- Sea cucumbers as food
- Shark
- Pacific sleeper shark
- Squaliformes