LittleB
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Shens said:Is that what I think it is?
If so, old.
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Datrix said:How did the person know it was there?
I wouldn't have been able to see it.
I call fake!
Datrix said:How did the person know it was there?
I wouldn't have been able to see it.
I call fake!
Well maybe animal planet faked it!<RJMC> said:is real
in many documental of animal planet you see that video
Possibly... but I stick with my opinion.Murray_H said:Perhaps that species of octopus favours that vegetation as a hiding spot so the person knew where to look, or maybe they followed the octopus and it hid.
Datrix said:Well maybe animal planet faked it!
Datrix said:Well maybe animal planet faked it!
Possibly... but I stick with my opinion.
Shens said:Yea, I don't trust Animal Planet anymore.
Not after the Dragons stunt they pulled off.
It seemed so real.
http://animal.discovery.com/convergence/dragons/dragons.html
Datrix said:Hey, that actually looked cool.![]()
I think I might be somehow "getting" that.
Raziaar said:Why do you guys believe this isn't real? Its amazing.
But nature has far more amazing things as well. Nature is amazing. Alot of things are possible in nature, that even in our advanced, technical age they still amaze us.
Nature is neat.
I just think It's weird how they knew it was there.Raziaar said:Why do you guys believe this isn't real? Its amazing.
But nature has far more amazing things as well. Nature is amazing. Alot of things are possible in nature, that even in our advanced, technical age they still amaze us.
Nature is neat.
Datrix said:I just think It's weird how they knew it was there.
Unless Murray_H's theory is right... which it probably is.
Datrix said:I just think It's weird how they knew it was there.
Unless Murray_H's theory is right... which it probably is.
Datrix said:I just think It's weird how they knew it was there.
Unless Murray_H's theory is right... which it probably is.
<RJMC> said:octopus are amazing creatures,they are more that a bag of meat whit tentacles
LittleB said:One species of octopus is more intelligent then dogs :O
Raziaar said:Ehh. Who cares about Octopus!
I like cuttlefish.
Cuttlefish have to be the damn most intelligent non mammal/non avian I have ever seen.
LittleB said:How do you test animal intelligence anyway?
But dolphins dont know sign language...eatbugs said:Dolphins are the smartest.
eatbugs said:Dolphins are the smartest.
South of the city of Singapore is an island called Sentosa. Sentosa has been converted into a tourist haven, and you can reach it by cable car. The most interesting attraction there, for us, was the aquarium.
These cuttlefish live there in a huge floor-to-ceiling tank. When we first approached them, they were all lined up, hovering, facing us, watching the tourists. Some of them lurked back in the rocks, others were closer to the front of the tank, but all of them were facing the same direction. Except for the undulations of their fins and the languid posturing of their tentacles, they were motionless. Their bodies rippled with changing color patterns.
We all stood and stared at them, and they stood and stared back at us. We found the positioning of their tentacles fascinating. It looked so purposeful. We speculated as to whether they were communicating among themselves with the color changes and the tentacle positions.
One of us suggested that we try talking to them using our fingers as tentacles. Each of us came close to the glass, put our fingers in front of our faces, and arranged our fingers in gestures similar to theirs.
One cuttlefish came forward out of the crowd to meet each of us. Mike had a cuttlefish. I had a cuttlefish. Megaera had a cuttlefish. And Malachi, who is the smallest of us, had a small cuttlefish. We gestured at them and they gestured at us. "What's he saying? What's he saying?" Malachi kept asking. Malachi's cuttlefish didn't do much gesturing. It just stared at Malachi, and we had the impression that it was another child, staring like a toddler with its mouth hanging open.
Another tourist saw what we were doing, and joined us. Another cuttlefish came forward to meet her. After a moment, she darted all her fingers at it suddenly, and it jumped back. It slowly came forward to face her again. Then it shot its syphon out at her. She squealed and leapt back.
Mike's cuttlefish then shot its syphon out at Mike a few times. Mike answered by flicking his fingers at the cuttlefish. Neither of them jumped.
We finally had to leave because the power went out.
We wonder if anyone else has tried talking to the cuttlefish of Sentosa, or any other cuttlefish. Is there a way to decode their language, or teach them some code of ours?
Cuttlefish are predacious carnivorous cephalopods related to squid and octopus. Cephalopods are a class of mollusks, a phylum that also includes snails, chitons, clams and slugs. The ammonites are an extinct group of cephalopods, and nautiloids are almost extinct. We later met some nautiloids in a tank in an aquarium in Yokohama, but they showed not a glimmer of intelligence.
Raziaar said:That's because dolphins are mammals. Certainly going to be much smarter than Cephalapods(SP?). But yeah. Dolphins are very intelligent, even among mammal standards. Second to humans? Or are they a tad under elephants? I can't remember.
Anyways... Gonna paste this story again, since its kinda neat to read in the sense of understanding some intelligent displays of behavior cuttlefish do.
LittleB said:Wow that's amazing, I wonder if you can get them as pets?
Raziaar said: