The Clever Ways in Which Solitary Octopuses Use Their Bodies To Communicate With Each Other
by Lori Dorn from Laughing Squid on (#3WBXA)
In an aquatic episode of The New York Times series ScienceTake from 2015, host James Gorman shares some very interesting information using research from David Scheel, Peter Godfrey-Smith and Matthew Lawrence. The three men studied the eight-armed cephalopods of Tasmania, Australia, Gorman explained the clever ways in which the solitary creatures use their bodies to send a message.
Did you know octopuses can communicate by changing their color and posture? That's just one of many findings from a group of researchers who studied the creatures in Tasmania, Australia.
- The Cognitive and Physiological Reasons That Explain Why Octopuses Are So Smart
- How an Octopus Breathes
- Scientists Discover How the Octopus Coordinates Its Eight Arms to Move
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