Monday, October 11, 2021

Consider the Cephalopod

There’s value in information that broadens awareness about a subject or being, and I don’t mean John Mulaney or Instagram. In this instance: We should quit fucking with octopuses, and certainly stop killing and eating them. 

Octopuses are among the planet’s distinct creatures. Intelligent, curious, pliant, adaptable, tender, freakishly strong, a wonder. All of that is made clear in “The Soul of an Octopus,” by naturalist Sy Montgomery. I’m late to it, as it came out in 2015 and was a finalist for the National Book Award. It’s a cool, light read. 

Octopuses have a bad rap, portrayed as monsters in literature, movies and sea-faring lore. Think Jules Verne, the Kraken, and wildly exaggerated tales of whale-sized octopuses attacking and destroying ships. It’s understandable, given that they’re about as physically dis-similar to human beings as imaginable, maybe as close to an alien being on Earth as you’ll find. 

Some folks freak when touched by an octopus, because it’s such a peculiar sensation. They’re invertebrates. They’re slimy. They have three hearts. Their mouths are located between their legs and are like a parrot’s beak. They taste and grasp and identify with the suckers on their tentacles, which often move independent of each other. Their brains are essentially wrapped around their throats. Their blood is blue. They are capable of releasing a neurotoxin. They squirt ink to deal with both predators and prey. They can change colors and shapes and skin texture in split seconds. They can squeeze into impossibly small spaces (a 50-pound octopus whose tentacles stretch five feet can fit through a space the size of an orange). They possess a funnel that they use to propel themselves and to shoot water at people and other creatures. 

Yet researchers who work with them find that they have personalities. They can be aggressive or chill, shy or playful, disinterested or engaging. They change color not just to camouflage themselves, but when they’re content or anxious or fearful. They recognize and remember people. 

There’s a story about one octopus at an aquarium that routinely squirted one of its handlers. The woman left for another job, and when she returned to visit months later, the octopus squirted her again. It had squirted no one else since she left. 

In one experiment, two unfamiliar handlers dressed identically. One brought food, the other gently poked the octopus with a bristly stick. Within a week, the octopus recognized the two on sight and went toward the feeder and away from the irritator, even when neither was carrying food or a stick. 

Though octopuses’ eyes work like a human’s, they are pretty much color-blind, which makes their ability to change color and camouflage themselves all the more remarkable. How do they know what colors to turn? 

Researchers think that their arms help them “see” because they are so sensitive and receptive. An octopus has about 300 million neurons, three-fifths of which are in their arms rather than their brains (a rat has 200 million neurons, humans about 100 billion neurons in their brains). Where humans have four distinct lobes in their brains, octopuses have 50 to 75, depending on size and species, which permits enormous multi-tasking. 

One neuroscientist quoted in the book said: “Short of Martians showing up and offering themselves to science, cephalopods are the only example outside of vertebrates of how to build a clever, complex brain.” 

Octopuses (the plural is not octopi – ‘i’ is a Latin plural ending, while ‘octopus’ is derived from a Greek word, and you aren’t supposed to mix the two) can untie knots and undo latches and open jars. At one aquarium, an octopus played with a small plastic ball that could be screwed and unscrewed in half. One handler put food inside the ball. The octopus not only unscrewed the ball to get the food, but screwed it back together when finished. They use their suckers to taste and probe and gather information, and they can pinch them together as humans do their thumb and forefinger. A two-inch sucker on a large octopus is capable of lifting 20-to-30 pounds. As octopuses have hundreds of suckers – smaller at the tips of their tentacles, larger toward their bodies – they possess tremendous strength. Divers and handlers know to be extremely cautious with them, as larger octopuses can overpower a person, though it’s more out of curiosity than malice. 

In 2012, a group of neuroscientists at the Cambridge (UK) Declaration on Consciousness issued a proclamation that included: “The weight of evidence indicates that humans are not unique in possessing the neurological substrates that generate consciousness. Non-human animals, including all mammals and birds, and many other creatures, including octopuses, also possess these neurological substrates.” As we gradually bake and submerge the planet, it strikes me that the whole dominion-over-all-creatures thing will become moot. All hands, and arms, on deck. And another intelligent species has far greater value than whether it’s better grilled or sauteed.

31 comments:

  1. if i'm prepared to concede that it's okay to eat humans, can i continue eating octopus? 'cause those genius creatures are delicious. and there are a goodly number of humans that probably should be eaten for the betterment of global society.

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  2. I've only had octopus once, and it was indeed delicious. I've yet to eat a human.

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  3. Ask Gerardo. He “eats ‘em raw like sushi,” allegedly.

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  4. I always enjoy the “who wrote this” game I play in my head as I read this. The science focus and level of detail had me leaning Zman. Well done, OBX Dave.

    I enjoy almost all seafood. I draw the line at uni.

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  5. Everyone else beat me to it. Octopuses may be highly sentient creatures but they taste good too.

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  6. Some scientists argue that octopus evolved from alien DNA.

    And both octopus and uni are delicious.

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  7. i think our man in the obx is disappointed in us. which, to be fair, is what most people are.

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  8. Get used to disappointment.

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  9. Uni is the Rocky Mountain oyster of seafood.

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  10. This may be my next read as I just finished Once Upon a Time in Hollywood - if you liked the movie, you'll love the book. If you disliked the movie, you'll probably love the book. With deep dives into Rick and Cliff, and more shallow ones into Sharon Tate and Charles Manson, I am yearning for a sequel.

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  11. You guys suck. I’ll never eat octopus again.

    Okay. In truth, I never much liked it, anyway, so now I get to feel good about it.

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  12. I'm reserving the right to be one and done on octopus, even though I liked it quite a bit.

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  13. I didn't anticipate the Donner Party Corollary to the octopus consumption argument, but it's an inspired, if twisted, take.

    No disappointment at all in this digital tree fort of ideas. Whatever works for people, provided it doesn't cause pain and suffering on human and societal levels. Which I think means that people consumption is gonna require some persuasion.

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  14. Went for the annual physical today. Got an email summary back. It said I was overweight and the ideal weight for my height (71”) is b/w 136-172 lbs. That makes total sense.

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  15. Was their chart from a country prone to famine?

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  16. Maybe that makes sense for a 71” tall woman?

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  17. i had an octopus, lettuce, and tomato (olt!) on rustic bread at lincoln in dc a few years back (if memory serves, i met shlara for a mini-summit lunch). it was phenomenal. i had some amazing octopus in spain two years ago. if i never eat octopus again, those two meals will be sufficient.

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  18. Gruden is out in LV and that’s the right solution.

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  19. he's gonna be campaigning for trump within a month.

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  20. FUCK YOU GRUDEN. EAT A DICK, ASSHOLE.

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  21. gruden is taking the fall for a bunch of more powerful folks. someone leaked his emails, which were obtained as part of the investigation of dan snyder. y'all think we're gonna see snyder's emails? me, neither.

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  22. I guess I should've stayed up to watch the end of MNF instead of going to bed when the Colts were up 25-9.

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  23. According to a WaPo piece from years back, and first reported by local TV guy Chick Hernandez, Snyder does not do email. Very mob-ish practice, if still true, and why he may continue to skate, even though WFT appears to be origin of Gruden emails and demise.

    Increasingly difficult to give time or credence to the league.

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  24. It's really poppin' off here lately.

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  25. The idea of a Red Sox - Astros ALCS makes me want to throw up in my mouth.

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  26. kinda gotta pull for the sox, no?

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  27. I’m rooting for a meteor to strike the field

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  28. Here's hoping TR's meteor spares Squeaky and our favorite Wheel of Fortune winner and their clans.

    I've watched zero minutes of baseball so far, but I've streamed the radio call for a few games. I said it - I like baseball on the radio. Am I old?

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