You may be wondering what they’re doing. Here’s a hint: that’s a male below, and a female above. Here’s another hint: that’s his specialized third arm, the hectocotyl limb. Third hint: it’s in her oviduct.
If you can’t figure it out yet, look below the fold for an illustration.
Figure from Cephalopods: A World Guide (amzn/b&n/abe/pwll), by Mark Norman.
BlueIndependent says
=)
I smile because I don’t know what’s going on…
Bachalon says
Yeesh. Poor guy has to sneak up on her an’ everything.
Colin says
What a typical octoguy! You’d think with eight arms he could spare at least one for foreplay! But no, he just reaches over and sticks his hectocotyl limb right in there.
Jeff Chamberlain says
Feelthy pictures. Octopuses. Cartoons. Science is good.
Eliza says
Ok, I’m confused. Here’s what I see – correct me where I’m wrong! The male is the dark redish thing at the bottom of the picture. The female looks like a mound of Ghostbuster-style ectoplasm, and is sat on top of a rock, and is biting it with very human-looking teeth (!). The male is stretching up to the female with his ‘specialized 3rd arm’, and is attempting to swat a pufferfish from her head (or whatever that part of her is). The pufferfish, understandably slightly alarmed by this, has puffed up in response.
Is that about right?
PZ Myers says
No, that’s not right at all, you naive, innocent, sweet thing.
Mary says
Fisting cephalopods. Now I truly have seen everything. And I wish I hadn’t.
Jessica Guilford says
I really don’t think it is appropriate to be posting this on a publicly-accessible blog. There may be impressionable young holothurians about.
Andrea says
Hi, yesterday I jumped into a blog by accident and found a nice Octopus movie.I know of your love for cephalopods so here is the link. I am not sure if it is a real movie, but looks amazing. Unfortunately the contents of the blog are not quite good, maybe good material for more of your posts…
(http://robboss.wordpress.com/2006/08/17/primitive-octopus-eats-shark/)
Jennifer Ouellette says
Squid porn. It was only a matter of time. :)
Alex says
Eliza,
You’re close. It’s not a “pufferfish”, it’s called a “flufferfiish”. It’s a very specialized species.
Stanton says
Does the hectocotylus detatch in this species?
TAW says
I don’t think I’ve seen anyone here mention it, so here it is- gay octopuses!
CCP says
birds Do It
bees Do It
…
octopuses Do It (well…yeah…sorta)
…
Australian lungfishes Do It (but not for long)
…
Dan says
Dear sweet Jeebus, Alex.
I think I need to wash my brain, now.
Warren says
You know, you should really warn us when you’re posting images that aren’t safe for work. Sheesh!
DocAmazing says
I think I need a cold shower right about now…
Xris says
I never see any photos or images when I visit your blog. I get to it through the feed, and I’m using Firefox. Is there some setting which is blocking images? The URL I get for this post is http://scienceblogs.com/pharyngula/2006/08/friday_cephalopod_explicit.php.
I enjoy reading your blog. I admire squid and octopi, though not professionally. One of my favorite memories is a close encounter with a squid while snorkeling in the Virgin Islands.
PierreB says
Xris
Yes, there is a security setting in Firefox that blocks media that is not from the same website as the rest of the page.
Go to: Tools,Options,Content
The checkbox “Load Images from originating website only” shouldn’t be checked.
Xris says
Hmmm … I have “Load images” enabled, but NOT “for the originating Web site only.” I think it’s a page-rendering problem. For example, I can see the caption Octopus cyanea at the top of the article. The HTML for the caption only has this:
There’s no tag in the HTML, hence no image.
Xris says
Sorry about that. I need to encode the HTML. Let’s try it this way:
<div class=”captionedfigure”> <br /><i>Octopus cyanea</i></div>
PZ Myers says
That’s very weird. There is an image tag in there, really there is.
I’ve jiggered some of the parameters in the tag a little. Tell me if it works for you now.
PZ Myers says
I can tell you that this is what is actually in there:
<div class=”captionedfigure”><img src=”http://scienceblogs.com/pharyngula/upload/2006/08/octopus_cyanea.jpg” alt=”octopus_cyanea.jpg” width=”400″ height=”664″ /><br /><i>Octopus cyanea</i></div>
It’s not computer generated or anything — I typed that code in by hand. I really do suspect that it’s something on your end that strips out img tags for some reason.
Xris says
Hey – both the photo and the, um, educational comic are showing up in IE today!
I’ll check in again later tonight with FireFox and see if it shows up there.
Austin Sipes says
I’m having the same issue in Firefox, and I don’t have any weird settings that I know of, either.
hank says
Firefox — use the Advanced button to the right of the Load Images area.
Paste in http://scienceblogs.com/pharyngula/ and click ‘Allow’
I don’t know why sometimes you need to explicitly allow it, but it can solve the problem regardless of how your other options are set.