Let's talk about one of the 'weirdest' creature of the sea, the octopus.
Most of us probably thought that octopuses use all their eight legs in pouncing their prey. But a new research shows that its not all octopus do it that way.
A video published by the University of California, Berkeley Campus shows a new strange way how octopus hunt their prey. The larger Pacific striped octopus (LPSO) in the new research uses only one leg in scaring its prey to its side before grasping it with the other legs.
Watch how the tiny creature hunts in this news research video.
An octopus is a cephalopod mollusc of the order Octopoda. It has two eyes and four pairs of arms and, like other cephalopods, it is bilaterally symmetric. An octopus has a hard beak, with its mouth at the center point of the arms and has no and no internal shell.
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