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If the octopus wants to have a rough texture, it raises the papillae if it wants to have a smooth texture, it flattens out the papillae.So it can acquire a smooth texture to blend in with the sandy bottom of the sea.So the octopus has the ability to mimic both the color and the texture of its environment, and it’s truly amazing how well it can blend in with its surroundings.You can easily swim within a few feet of an octopus and never see it.
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OCTOPUS PREDATORS SKIN
So that’s how octopuses mimic colors.But they don’t just mimic the colors in their environment they can also mimic the texture of objects in their environment.They have these little projections on their skin that allow them to resemble various textures.The projections are called papillae. Chromatophores consist of tiny sacs filled with colored dye.There might be a couple hundred of these color sacs per square millimeter of the octopus’s skin, and, depending on the species, they can come in as many as five different colors.Each one of these sacs is controlled by muscles.If the muscles are relaxed, the sac shrinks, and all you see is a little white point.But if the muscles contract, then the sac expands, and you can see the colors.And by expanding different combinations of these color sacs to different degrees, the octopus can create all sorts of colors.Ah yes, Elizabeth? FEMALE STUDENT:And just with various combinations of those five colors, they can recreate any color in their environment? FEMALE STUDENT:Well they can no doubt create a lot with just those five colors, but you’re right, maybe they can’t mimic every color around them.So that’s where the second kind of cell comes in.Just below the chromatophores is a layer of cells that reflect light from the environment, and these cells help the octopus create a precise match with the colors that surround them.The colors from the color sacs are supplemented with colors that are reflected from the environment, and that’s how they’re able to mimic colors with such precision. For me, the most fascinating transformation is when it changes its color.Its “normal” skin color-the one it generally presents-is, uh, either red or brown, or even gray, and it’s speckled with dark spots.But when it wants to blend in with its environment, to hide from its enemies, it can take on the color of its immediate surroundings-the ocean floor, a rock,a piece of coral, whatever.Charles? MALE STUDENT:Do we know how that works, I mean, how they change colors? FEMALE PROFESSOR:Well, we know that the reaction that takes place is not chemical in nature.The color changes are executed by two different kinds of cells in the octopus’s skin, mainly by color cells on the skin’s surface, called chromatophores.
OCTOPUS PREDATORS SERIES
one of the unusual creatures that live in the sea.The octopus is prey to many species, including humans, so how does it escape its predators?Well, let me back up here a second… anyone ever hear of um Proteus? Proteus was a god in Greek mythology who could change form.He could make himself look like a lion, or a stone, or a tree, anything you want, and he could go through a whole series of changes very quickly.Well, the octopus is the real-world version of Proteus just like Proteus, the octopus can go through all kinds of incredible transformations.And it does this in three ways: By changing color, by changing its texture, and by changing its size and shape. FEMALE PROFESSOR:Okay, now I want to talk about an animal that has a fascinating set of defense mechanisms, and that’s the octopus. NARRATOR:Listen to part of a lecture in a biology class.