Coconut shell shelter for “smart” octopus-research

SYDNEY, (Reuters Life!) – Australian scientists have  discovery an octopus species that carries around coconut shells  to hide in when threatened, behaviour the researchers said was  the first example of sophisticated tool use in an invertebrate.

Biologists Julian Finn and Mark Norman spent almost 10  years diving off the coasts of Northen Sulawesi and Bali in  Indonesia, studying more than 20 specimens of the Veined  Octopus. The octopuses were found to occupy empty seashells,  discarded coconut shell halves or manmade objects, and on  several dives, the researchers saw them carrying coconut shell  halves below their body and swimming away with them.

Sometimes, an octopus would carry two shell halves and then  put them together to form a shelter, the scientists said.

“We we were actually in Indonesia in North Sulawesi,  looking for the Mimic Octopus when we chanced across this  octopus, known as the Veined Octopus doing amazing behaviour,”  Finn told Australian media.

“Using tools is something we think is very special about  humans, but it also exists in other animal groups we’ve never  considered before, a low life form, a relative of a snail.  These octopuses, they’re not simple animals,” added Norman.

The biologists’ research was published in the recent  edition of Current Biology journal.