A
female octopus lays eggs once in her lifetime and dies soon after. But
until the eggs hatch, she guards them fiercely, to the point of not
eating. For one octopus in the Monterey Canyon of the Pacific Ocean,
that meant a record-breaking four and half years of diligence!
Researchers from the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute first
observed this octopus in 2007, traveling to a brooding site. She was
seen again 18 times over the next 53 months, always guarding her eggs.
Bruce Robison of the institute said that they recognized it was the same
octopus by her distinctive scars. In 2011, divers finally found the egg
cases empty and the octopus mother gone.
The mother's
devotion to her eggs may have been the final act of her life, Robison
said, noting that the egg brooding period can occupy as much as the last
quarter in the life of a female octopus.
She was never observed away from her egg clutch, he said, and probable never ate during her 53-month vigil.
"Everything we know suggests she probably didn't eat," Robison said.
Octopuses typically experience a single reproductive period after which they die.
The
low temperature at the depth of the nest is suspected to be the reason
the eggs took so long to hatch, and would also explain how the mother
lived so long without food.
The 53 months is now a world record for egg brooding, not just for octopuses, but for all animals. The previous record was 20 months for a red shrimp.
No comments:
Post a Comment