Octopus Playtime | Octopus In My House | BBC Earth

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  • Опубликовано: 29 сен 2021
  • Scientists have discovered that octopuses are intelligent enough to do things... just for fun!
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    The Octopus In My House
    A professor develops an extraordinary relationship with an octopus when he invites it to live in his home. The octopus, called Heidi, unravels puzzles, recognises individual humans and even watches TV with the family. The episode also shows remarkable behaviour from around the world - from the day octopus, which can change colour and texture in a split second, to the coconut octopus, which carries around its own coconut shell to hide in. But most fascinating of all is seeing how Professor David Scheel and his daughter Laurel bond with an animal that has nine brains, three hearts and blue blood running through its veins.
    Welcome to BBC EARTH! The world is an amazing place full of stories, beauty and natural wonder. Here you'll find 50 years worth of entertaining and thought-provoking natural history content. Dramatic, rare, and exclusive, nature doesn't get more exciting than this.
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Комментарии • 4,2 тыс.

  • @MM-vv8mt
    @MM-vv8mt 2 года назад +4325

    When I lived in Cyprus, I'd run at the beach every morning. Once day, I was catching my breath bent over by the water looking at the rocks under water and saw a small octopodi just sitting there by her nest of rocks. I stuck my hand down into the water and thought she'd skedaddle for cover, but instead, she reached out and stuck out a few of her tentacles and wrapped them around my fingers. We played like that for a few minutes and then she got bored and moved back into her rock house. The next day, I went back, and there she was, and we did the same thing. I did this every day with her for the next month. Such a beautiful creature and so smart and responsive. I called her Juli, and I don't know what she called me. I never ate octopus ever again. In fact, because of her, I never ate any animals again. That was almost 25 years ago.

    • @wordzmyth
      @wordzmyth 2 года назад +201

      Wow Juli did so much in those meeting with you. She did what so few can, gave you a reason to change your mind. Your friendship with her also saved many animal lives. I was vegetarian for years because I did not like the way food animals are treated. But I resolved it by trying to eat free range animals that have had good lives. As humans we may cause their death but we should respect their lives. I have loved many animals but none had as great an affect on me as Julie did on you.

    • @keeptaiwanfree
      @keeptaiwanfree 2 года назад +80

      That is so good for you. I’m so grateful that Juli affected you so positively… As a vegetarian myself I’m so glad you decided to stop eating animals. Animals do nothing deserve to be our food, they deserve to be treated equally.

    • @Luna-oo3fl
      @Luna-oo3fl 2 года назад +54

      Better go get a burger

    • @gregbors8364
      @gregbors8364 2 года назад

      @Custos Luminis True, they say an octopus has the intelligence level of a house cat, so it has to be the Democrats. Because Republicans aren’t that smart

    • @TeriyakiDior
      @TeriyakiDior 2 года назад +78

      This is by far the sweetest animal story I’ve read in awhile. I’ve been really tempted to go vegan again because of the love I have for animals and health reasons ❤️

  • @stephenpain9236
    @stephenpain9236 2 года назад +5361

    Years ago I worked at a dive centre in Cyprus where there was a young octopus in a tank/aquarium with a tube in one corner aerating the water with a constant stream of bubbles. The octopus would position itself over the tube, holding on with tentacles and then suddenly let go and ride the bubble stream up and across the tank. Then back for another go, and so on. Definitely playing and almost certainly a bit bored in captivity.

    • @nicolarollinson4381
      @nicolarollinson4381 2 года назад +360

      Any wild creature in a tank or a cage, has to be bored...

    • @David-wk6md
      @David-wk6md 2 года назад +110

      Sure
      After awhile
      The first couple months most be all terror

    • @nicolarollinson4381
      @nicolarollinson4381 2 года назад +192

      @@David-wk6md its v cruel to strip them of their freedom.
      Its basically solitary confinement in prison 😭

    • @user-pv2pd3ws5u
      @user-pv2pd3ws5u 2 года назад +49

      @@nicolarollinson4381 lmao dude what sbout parrots like cockatoos and such, they're held in captivity (very often alone) as well

    • @nicolarollinson4381
      @nicolarollinson4381 2 года назад +93

      @@user-pv2pd3ws5u yep, them too.
      Thats what I'm saying

  • @CorinneWoods
    @CorinneWoods Год назад +1204

    The fact that an octopus can play, recognize faces and seek attention from humans is absolutely fascinating.

    • @thurston4mor
      @thurston4mor Год назад +12

      They are very intelligent
      Like a small dog

    • @irisdaniels2318
      @irisdaniels2318 Год назад +16

      ​@@thurston4mor smarter.

    • @upturnedblousecollar5811
      @upturnedblousecollar5811 11 месяцев назад +7

      I'd love to see an Octopus getting drunk.

    • @Rico0333
      @Rico0333 11 месяцев назад +2

      Dolphins are smarter than humans

    • @cra2cra226
      @cra2cra226 10 месяцев назад +4

      How do we know it's seeking attention from humans vs. exploring and poking anything that it can get its hands on? I put my hand near the ant mound, the ant crawls all over me, too.

  • @Max_m
    @Max_m Год назад +438

    For those who don’t know, the Seattle Octopus that got pretty famous for its level of ingenuity/smartness was because at night it would escape its tank by moving a loose decoration that gave it just enough height to get a leg over the top of the tank, then make its way the 50+ feet across the hall to the touch tanks, have a meal, and then somehow get back across and room and back into its tank.

    • @michelledelhaye3473
      @michelledelhaye3473 7 месяцев назад +2

      Vous ne croyer pas que tout etre Marin devrais etre Dan's les oceans .pour etre Heureux A mediter 😮

    • @Msfifisquarepantz
      @Msfifisquarepantz 3 месяца назад

      Is that true?

    • @jackieguccione94
      @jackieguccione94 3 месяца назад

      @@Msfifisquarepantz ye look it UP

    • @Samariapain
      @Samariapain 3 месяца назад +1

      I'm thinking that's what it is communicating with the pill bottle

    • @rosemaryadamson5176
      @rosemaryadamson5176 2 месяца назад +5

      We know so very little about the species on our own planet. Let's try to understand them before worrying about understanding aliens.

  • @jonbilgutay2
    @jonbilgutay2 2 года назад +3653

    I loved the scene later on where the guy sets up a bell the octopus can ring to get the humans to show up and feed it. He inadvertently turned himself into the octopus' butler.

    • @karadiberlino
      @karadiberlino 2 года назад +267

      @@itaierrol Go back to ur basement... 🙄

    • @fatdad64able
      @fatdad64able 2 года назад +38

      Was the octopus' name Pavlov?

    • @juanjoyaborja.3054
      @juanjoyaborja.3054 2 года назад +116

      @@itaierrol There always is one guy who wants to ruin a video about a creature with “I want to eat it.”
      Get a life, please, and go to your local psychologist.
      Also, if you want to eat octopuses, you’re risking yourself getting mercury poisoning. The ocean isn’t as clean as it used to be.

    • @girlygal098
      @girlygal098 2 года назад +3

      🤓👍

    • @maggied8468
      @maggied8468 2 года назад +2

      😁👍♥️

  • @Tiger-One
    @Tiger-One 2 года назад +1770

    The more I learn about the playfulness of an octopus, the sense of humor crows display, how cleaner shrimp set up cosmetic stations for their clients, or how an aquarium cleaner once made friends with a moray eel, the more sense children's books make to me when they attribute human quality to our fellow earthly citizens.

    • @Stop_This_Madness
      @Stop_This_Madness 2 года назад +38

      I like this comment alot.

    • @noone-re3zp
      @noone-re3zp 2 года назад +15

      poetry

    • @ifiveoh
      @ifiveoh 2 года назад +50

      Whoa whoa whoa … what’s this about shrimp cosmetology?

    • @egosumhomovespertilionem2022
      @egosumhomovespertilionem2022 2 года назад +71

      IF you remove the necessity to hunt by providing regular sources of fresh food, many of these animals can manifest different aspects of their natural personalities. But clearly that's not the way it works in their natural environment.

    • @pluckybellhop66
      @pluckybellhop66 2 года назад +51

      @@egosumhomovespertilionem2022 This comment deserves all the likes. I think I saw something about how feeding wild foxes not only changed attitudes but even the way they look changed, they honestly looked friendlier and their pelts were redder. I think that in some ways living in the wild with no help affects animals the same way living on the streets affects people.

  • @j9andphoenix
    @j9andphoenix Год назад +176

    The film 'My Octopus Teacher' was glorious and was all filmed in the ocean rather than a tank. They are phenomenal and if we recognise their intelligence, a tank is kind of sad.

    • @suras8984
      @suras8984 3 месяца назад +5

      It was sad that the man in the documentary built a friendship based on trust with the octopus then pretended to not interfere when its life was at risk and didnt even hold its tentacle when it was dying and watched as it got torn apart limb by limb.

    • @krazyxki
      @krazyxki Месяц назад +4

      @@suras8984 I was going to watch after the comment, but then your comment made me decide to not watch... 😅

    • @suras8984
      @suras8984 Месяц назад +2

      @@krazyxki it's still worth watching because the octopus is so amazing

    • @krazyxki
      @krazyxki Месяц назад +3

      @@suras8984 Someone brought up a good point that the guy kept scaring the octopus in the film, like he talks about bonding with it but you can see the octopus inking multiple times when he is around and swimming in fear of him. The octopus would not be inking if it was not afraid. He kept chasing the octopus around. It'd be one thing if it constantly approached him but he kept obsessively seeking it out. He kind of projects his human mindset on the octopus in the film, essentially. And basically it's lowkey his fault bringing the octopus out of its hiding that the octopus ends up becoming food LOL, yet he does not save it. Perhaps it would have survived if he had not kept following it for over a year. He interfered with nature yet sat and watched it become food to not interfere with nature, which makes no sense. These are all really good points.
      I'm a film graduate and quite frankly, I've watched enough films with pretentious directors like that. Knowing what I know about the film now, I likely would not enjoy it. I'm sure it's a beautiful film but IMO I don't like the human arrogance and projection. That octopus shouldn't have been used for his character development just to get wiped out lol. I do plan on watching the full documentary of this video to learn more about octopuses though.

    • @suras8984
      @suras8984 Месяц назад +3

      @@krazyxki I def agree with everything you said! I remember the film maker made me so upset pretending to have all these emotions for the octopus when his actions were the direct opposite of that.

  • @decoeric
    @decoeric Год назад +154

    I was scuba diving in Bonaire a few years ago and I had just started my dive, it was a shore dive. I got to about 12' and came across what I will call a "baby" octopus, I would say he was 8-10" in diameter. I ended up spending my entire dive playing with him. He would go and hide between some rocks, I would wiggle my hand and he would come out and play with my hand. I had neoprene gloves on, this went on for about 60 minutes. I never left the area and it was they coolest experience I have EVER had diving. Just me and that little octopus.

  • @Loyannelima
    @Loyannelima 2 года назад +2167

    I love how the scene looks like it's walking in the house, not actually inside of an aquarium 😍😍😍

    • @keithburgess4088
      @keithburgess4088 2 года назад +31

      that's what caught my eye!

    • @Witchofthewoods.
      @Witchofthewoods. 2 года назад +6

      You mean he wasn't?! 👀
      🐙 🛋️ It was awesome footage!!

    • @davidmg1925
      @davidmg1925 2 года назад +4

      You mean you are intelligent enough to realise he wasnt?
      What do you think the octopus thinks?

    • @GeorgiaAndrea
      @GeorgiaAndrea 2 года назад +34

      The water is super clean!

    • @johnycraft7665
      @johnycraft7665 2 года назад +13

      Thats when you know that his a very good owner keeping his friend house clean

  • @crossoverclub1378
    @crossoverclub1378 2 года назад +1624

    Octopuses are such incredible animals. Their intelligence is truly something.

    • @montech5647
      @montech5647 2 года назад +1

      Intelligence = instinct development

    • @johnlim6177
      @johnlim6177 2 года назад +4

      Let's send them to space.

    • @johnlim6177
      @johnlim6177 2 года назад

      The well robotic version that is.

    • @TheGrumbliestPuppy
      @TheGrumbliestPuppy 2 года назад +27

      @@montech5647 ...What? Instinct is literally the opposite of intelligence, instinct is innate/untaught.

    • @montech5647
      @montech5647 2 года назад +1

      @@TheGrumbliestPuppy I know it. That's why I mentioned "instinct development"...

  • @COLT-zr3jf
    @COLT-zr3jf 7 месяцев назад +75

    To say that these beautiful creatures are not sentient is crazy, they are more connected to their world than we could ever be. Your video's are intriguing and such a valuable learning tool. Thank you.

    • @celestinarobey177
      @celestinarobey177 21 день назад

      They shouldn't be kept in aquariums. They are far too intelligent for that to be an ethical living situation for them. It's rather heartbreaking really, regardless of the overwhelming cuteness.

  • @alanaaites8292
    @alanaaites8292 10 месяцев назад +78

    You can see the intelligence in their eyes. I had one in Hawaii following us around a dock. It watched our every action.

  • @SnapesDM
    @SnapesDM 2 года назад +2320

    This dude needs a YT channel so we can see more of the beautiful octopus

    • @melaniehartmann853
      @melaniehartmann853 2 года назад +46

      Freedom would be better.

    • @morneschaap2944
      @morneschaap2944 2 года назад +3

      Love this so much!

    • @hiawatha8962
      @hiawatha8962 2 года назад +33

      No, he doesn't actually.
      I totally feel bad for that poor animal trapped in tiny water tank.

    • @saturnpeax
      @saturnpeax 2 года назад +44

      Dumb animal activist thinking the octopus should be freed is pure comedy 🤣

    • @danielseaburg9763
      @danielseaburg9763 2 года назад +6

      This girl*

  • @Somenite
    @Somenite 2 года назад +900

    My friends and I used to do a ton of Scuba diving and the few times we ran into an octopus we always talked about how intelligent they seemed when we got out of the water. You can just sense how smart they are and they always seem to be looking you over as much as you are checking them out. Also had an employee at a local aquarium tell us that they had fish disappearing over a few days from a large tank and when they went back and reviewed footage from security cameras they found an octopus in an adjacent tank was opening a hatch on top of its tank and crawling over into the fish tank, eating one or two and then going back to it's own tank and even closing the top behind it. Crazy story but I believe it.

    • @mysmirandam.6618
      @mysmirandam.6618 Год назад +33

      What a sneaky mo fo!

    • @zozihn8047
      @zozihn8047 Год назад +53

      That tank story is repeated on film with crabs. There was a documentary many years ago, I'm sure you can find it on youtube. From memory: it's about an octopus that would get fed crabs from time to time. The crabs were kept in a separate room in their own tank. During the night the octopus left its tank, went under the door, across the hall, under that door, opened the crab tank, and reached down to eat the crabs from their tank. Then it would go back to it's own tank as if nothing had happened.

    • @Guayota6
      @Guayota6 Год назад +11

      I swear I’ve heard of this story before

    • @JadeDragon407
      @JadeDragon407 Год назад +7

      Missing fish next door eh? Sorry officer, I have no clue what might be going on over there. 🤣🤣🤣 Being a diver would be amazing; all the different animals you'd get to see.

    • @kristinabliss
      @kristinabliss Год назад +14

      Also part of the story is that the octopus was deliberately timing the heist to be when the security guard was not walking through on rounds.

  • @scootermom1791
    @scootermom1791 Год назад +72

    We had a beta fish that loved playing in the bubbles of his aquarium. He'd purposely swim into the bubbles then let them push him out. He'd do this several times throughout the day. He also loved when we put floating objects on top of the water. He especially liked the rubber ducks and the moss ball. It was fun to see him interact with different objects.

  • @charlie6629
    @charlie6629 Год назад +36

    I've always said they are alien. Such intelligence and memories. Their ability to figure things out is amazing.

  • @charcat1571
    @charcat1571 2 года назад +432

    My late Grandfather, Martin R. Brittan, was a Professor of Biological Sciences at California State University and specialized in Ichthyology. He refused to eat any Cephalopoda after researching them, he believed they were highly intelligent and sentient creatures. One female in particular would get out of the tank repeatedly no matter what efforts he took to secure it, and she would play hide and seek with him. She also, like our octopus girl in the video, loved to pull herself up from the tank to wrap herself around his shoulders in a hug.

    • @professionalshitpost4443
      @professionalshitpost4443 Год назад +14

      I would not be surprised if it turned out the cephalopd side of mollusks were sentient/sapient. They always act like it when I see videos of them.

    • @sitcomsTV
      @sitcomsTV Год назад +25

      I'm not a smart but I can sense they are. And I fear we shouldn't eat them.
      But then, they are already dead when you go to the supermarket lol.
      yet if you have one alive, let it be alive.
      Specially because the way they kill them is by cutting their heads off. Is very cruel. Saw many chinese videos here on youtube how they slice all types of fish and its terrible! They put them alive to boil or cut them alive. You see the creature moving in pain with just its flesh showing, no skin, no fins, sometimes no guts - but still with a brain. CRUELTY

    • @WaningGibbous
      @WaningGibbous Год назад +11

      I too will not eat any cephlapods...octos are my favorite animal

    • @drbrandykaye
      @drbrandykaye Год назад +2

      Awesome experience!

    • @henribenri
      @henribenri Год назад +11

      My grandfather Horatio Gumloop Snr III was Chief of Cuttlefish Marine Science at Berkeley in the 1980s. He pioneered hypnotic sentience reversal in static gastropods. One day he was quite startled by one of the femalian kettle-faced Cuttlefish, can you believe it jumped up on his desk, flashed her titles and then urinated on a research paper he'd left out on the desk. She was certainly a cheeky naughty little Cuttlefish..!

  • @bellah8393
    @bellah8393 2 года назад +974

    Three hearts. No wonder she’s so affectionate. She has more love to give.

    • @mohithrai5696
      @mohithrai5696 2 года назад +32

      never thought of it that way, ha ha, sweet!

    • @krane15
      @krane15 2 года назад +2

      Affectionate? Its an octopus. It has no more capacity for affection than a new species of bacteria.

    • @tomerzafon4
      @tomerzafon4 2 года назад +9

      Octopus should be the symbol of the Trinity.

    • @tncorgi92
      @tncorgi92 2 года назад +77

      @@krane15 I've got to disagree. Octopi have been observed playing and cuddling with each other. They can bond to individual humans.

    • @SumThingFawful
      @SumThingFawful 2 года назад +36

      @@krane15 That's just flat out wrong on so many levels

  • @madenabennett
    @madenabennett Год назад +18

    I worked at a wildlife rehabilitation center and we had many animals on display for education. Some of the animals one would think were the least intelligent or responsive were quite the opposite. One of the biggest hams was a Red Eared Slider. This dude would put on a show when guests would come in for a tour. He’d play “basketball” where he’d push a rock to the surface and let it drop (over and over until he was sure he had your attention). He’d climb up his ramp and do this teetering routine on a high ledge until he’d finally crash into the water with a big splash. Such a little drama queen.

  • @kayfarmer6056
    @kayfarmer6056 Год назад +87

    Recently read "the Soul of an Octopus" by Sy Montgomery. What an eye-opener! Had no idea what intelligent and interactive creatures they are !!!

    • @mildlymarvelous
      @mildlymarvelous 7 месяцев назад +2

      I love that book so much!!! After reading it I am absolutely repulsed that people can eat these incredibly soulful and intelligent animals.

    • @aldoveranzo2837
      @aldoveranzo2837 2 дня назад

      I am on my last few pages of that book by Sy. It is transformative on what Life really is.

  • @discoshrimp3073
    @discoshrimp3073 2 года назад +913

    Here I am, almost in my 30s, kids and wife are sleeping and me watching an octopus swimming in an aquarium while all my friends are out drinking beer on a bar. How splendid.

    • @stenchtrench9554
      @stenchtrench9554 2 года назад +56

      Smoke weed, dude.

    • @bradenrodriguez5183
      @bradenrodriguez5183 2 года назад +8

      On a bar?

    • @discoshrimp3073
      @discoshrimp3073 2 года назад +57

      @@provisionalhypothesis Some things you have power over, others not. As man you gotta take responsibility over your actions and so did I. That's why i'm watching the octopus swimming. Have a good one.

    • @discoshrimp3073
      @discoshrimp3073 2 года назад +16

      @@bradenrodriguez5183 Or in a bar, you may decide my friend. English is not my first language.

    • @YahLovesYou86
      @YahLovesYou86 2 года назад +46

      You are married with children in your own home? You should be thankful. Many do not fair so well in this world.

  • @EchanteDante
    @EchanteDante 2 года назад +98

    That rhythmic twirling of its legs was absolutely magical and hypnotic…WHAT WAS IT DOING?

  • @NeoN-PeoN
    @NeoN-PeoN 5 месяцев назад +27

    It really is a terrible shame how short their lives are.😢😢

    • @vrsalcedo7245
      @vrsalcedo7245 Месяц назад +1

      It might be the only reason we're not lower on the food chain.

  • @naturesoul5
    @naturesoul5 10 месяцев назад +20

    There's more intelligence and empathy hidden in the wild than we could scale...we need to give our love and respect to all living creatures....this beautiful video showcases this very well❤🌷

    • @celestinarobey177
      @celestinarobey177 21 день назад

      This beautiful video also shows all that intelligence held captive 24/7. I can't imagine the poor thing wouldn't be happier if it were free.

  • @Kevinto.
    @Kevinto. 2 года назад +524

    Mans bored out of his mind. Bouncing pill bottles like hes in jail haha

    • @redstonecasey4713
      @redstonecasey4713 2 года назад +8

      Reminds me of Steve McQueen in The Great Escape.

    • @The_Essential_Review
      @The_Essential_Review 2 года назад +2

      @@redstonecasey4713 And the Simpsons parody with Maggie!!

    • @aminahreviewsstuff
      @aminahreviewsstuff 2 года назад +4

      Sad

    • @andreforcier97
      @andreforcier97 2 года назад

      @@aminahreviewsstuff ruclips.net/video/RZa79QGDeo8/видео.html

    • @DejaJaws
      @DejaJaws 2 года назад +9

      Sad isn't it? Such intelligent and emotional creatures yet we decide to put them in a tank for our amusement. The day humans stop playing god is the day mother earth finally gets rid of us.

  • @dontdoitdan7965
    @dontdoitdan7965 2 года назад +440

    I think one of my favorite stories about octopus intelegence is the one where an art student went to a aquarium to do some sketches of the fish. When they came around to the octopus, they noticed the octopus would hold still for a bit, move, then hold still again in a different position. Almost as if the octopus knew they were drawing it.

    • @funfact1310
      @funfact1310 2 года назад +24

      I once heard a story that an Octopus was playing 5 musical instrument at the same time..

    • @katpage9378
      @katpage9378 2 года назад +1

      @@funfact1310 I heard that one!

    • @funfact1310
      @funfact1310 2 года назад +5

      @@katpage9378
      But, it was an Animated movie.

    • @ecallk5544
      @ecallk5544 2 года назад +6

      Universal language = telepathy.

    • @thewinner7382
      @thewinner7382 2 года назад +6

      That sounds incredibly unlikely

  • @Heffey02
    @Heffey02 Год назад +3

    Humans do not give other animals enough credit. Loved the 600 million year fact. I hope we can start protecting and respecting the other inhabitants on this planet. If not we will all suffer equally.

  • @jenniferkleczka279
    @jenniferkleczka279 28 минут назад

    I have always loved the unusual types of animals. My favorites are, octopus, shoebill storks, bat's, large constrictor snakes, pitbulls and crows.

  • @S3n_ha1zu2.x
    @S3n_ha1zu2.x 2 года назад +566

    Everyone gangster until Cthulhu gets out of the tank and goes on a rampage.

    • @whowantstoknawonhumanbones518
      @whowantstoknawonhumanbones518 2 года назад +2

      Especially a women cthulhu

    • @QuartzGhost
      @QuartzGhost 2 года назад +3

      @@whowantstoknawonhumanbones518
      Not me

    • @carldacosta3184
      @carldacosta3184 2 года назад +5

      That's right.
      For now she's only collecting info and patiently waiting for reinforcements.

    • @bloodybritbastard
      @bloodybritbastard 2 года назад

      Don’t worry, they are not that bad. They are smart but they are not..-Ph'nglui mglw'nafh Cthulhu R'lyeh wgah'nagl fhtagn!

    • @huberticusrex
      @huberticusrex 2 года назад

      Facts

  • @davidmg1925
    @davidmg1925 2 года назад +6

    "almost certainly a bit bored in captivity."
    This is major concern and what filling my brain whilst watching this.
    Wouldn't the animal be happier in its natural environment?

    • @BBpinto
      @BBpinto 2 года назад +2

      Just my personal feeling is that it would be better to have a ban on keeping them in captivity. To have a tiny cage as opposed to the vast ocean seems a great loss, no matter how well they are taken care of in their cage.

  • @JessicaBeee
    @JessicaBeee Год назад +9

    *Some octopus are able to blend, camouflage, and mimic their environment. THAT ALONE is fascinating & proof that they are highly intelligent creatures. I love it*

  • @maypanah5880
    @maypanah5880 3 дня назад

    Also thanks to the judge, he did a fantastic job, this wasn't easy, he truly deserves credit.

  • @Muryxkitteh
    @Muryxkitteh 2 года назад +12

    Until very recently, biologists were rather bewildered about why an animal that lives an almost entirely solitary life could be so friendly and sociable with the researchers who studied them. (It's just been revealed that certain octopuses live in much less solitary circumstances than was previously believed.)
    I've (rather facetiously) wondered if the octopus is such a sociable soul because, with those multiple brains for controlling its several arms, it's used to "group-living" in its own head!

  • @chrisb6791
    @chrisb6791 2 года назад +675

    It's cool the way it looks like the octopus is in it's own home, free-roaming about the living room. Octopus used to really creep me out until I learned how intelligent they are and now I find them quite adorable and humorous. I don't see how people can eat them! So sad!

    • @mitchell8003
      @mitchell8003 2 года назад +59

      Sad but delicious!

    • @Unan1mouz
      @Unan1mouz 2 года назад +20

      @@mitchell8003 Yeah sadly they're delicious. Esp in Japanese cuisine, lol

    • @mitchell8003
      @mitchell8003 2 года назад +14

      @@Unan1mouz have you tried Mediterranean style?

    • @Apostate_ofmind
      @Apostate_ofmind 2 года назад +3

      @@mitchell8003 delish!

    • @DrBunnyMedicinal
      @DrBunnyMedicinal 2 года назад +37

      Yeah, I'm deeply saddened by how delicious Octopus (especially in things like takoyaki) can be.
      But not enough to return to eating it. I just can't justify to myself eating a critter I've grown to strongly believe are both sentient and sapient.

  • @mikemaydonik2608
    @mikemaydonik2608 Год назад +39

    They are such amazingly fascinating creatures.

    • @blaineedwards8078
      @blaineedwards8078 Год назад +1

      Octopus originally came on the mothership that crashed off the Strait of Gibraltar and became Atlantis. That ship was from Uranus. Did you see what I just did there? OCTOPUS ARE FROM URANUS!

  • @meganm1074
    @meganm1074 4 месяца назад +8

    The fact that a human can play, recognize faces and seek attention from octopuses is absolutely fascinating.

  • @kadentam2946
    @kadentam2946 2 года назад +52

    That is the clearest water I have ever seen

  • @LouLou-jo5ln
    @LouLou-jo5ln 2 года назад +54

    My family had a pet octopus for a couple of months (long story) and it was returned to the ocean. While in the aquarium it would angle jets of water through a tiny gap in the glass lid and squirt my children to make them squeal! It enjoyed the interaction. It would also hide from visitors. I hope it had a very happy 🐙 life. I won't eat octopus or cuttlefish 💖 from Australia xx

    • @celestinarobey177
      @celestinarobey177 20 дней назад

      Best comment yet. So happy yours got to get out of captivity. As much as I do enjoy seeing them, it breaks my heart when they are in captivity, much like seeing primates locked up. Far too intelligent for that to be good.

    • @LouLou-jo5ln
      @LouLou-jo5ln 20 дней назад

      @@celestinarobey177 Yes, so intelligent. Any intellgent animal in captivity is a crime 💖 xx

  • @JadeDragon407
    @JadeDragon407 Год назад +15

    Octos are really neat critters. I had to laugh when she was playing with the girl's arm and spraying water at her. Just how they look is bizarre enough, we oughtn't be surprised their minds and personalities are just as mysterious and unusual. I generally find that animals deserve more credit than what many people given them in some degree or another, although their environment and physical limitations can surely play a role at the level of cognition that we can perceive in them. Animals may not have the level of thought we have, but I find that certain aspects of intelligence are apt to be found across the board. For those of lesser mental capacity, perhaps there is some key with some of them that we just have yet to discover.
    The challenge is discovering what goes on in their heads since we can't ask them questions, and have to devise understanding through watching their lifestyles, relationships and environmental behaviors. Since the octopus has such interesting physical abilities, not to mention being capable of manipulating objects so well, it stands to reason that they would enjoy all manner of shenanigans. >>;=)

  • @debrabolton9372
    @debrabolton9372 2 месяца назад +1

    The octopus is my favorite sea animal. They are intelligent, entertaining, and beautiful.

  • @sophieking572
    @sophieking572 2 года назад +803

    A family friend of mine was given a octopus to eat as a gift. She drove to the beach and set it free. They are so clever and deserve our respect

    • @dizcret
      @dizcret 2 года назад +9

      Exactly! F this Quack & his little 'pet' trapped in a tiny tank, needs to be free swimming in the Ocean!

    • @joylynch5204
      @joylynch5204 2 года назад +22

      It needs a bigger tank

    • @paulmorphy6187
      @paulmorphy6187 2 года назад +29

      "They are so clever and deserve our respect" family friends or octopuses?

    • @aziizrocks
      @aziizrocks 2 года назад +60

      @@paulmorphy6187 the latter. Although cows, chicken, and sheep are low IQ, y'all would be surprised how intelligent pigs are. Many times more than a dog or cat, yet relegated to be seen as nothing more than a hamburger.

    • @windsofmarchjourneyperrytr2823
      @windsofmarchjourneyperrytr2823 2 года назад

      Um, doesn't know much about fish, then...? I knew there's a big to-do just for a 3.00 fish from the aquarium.
      Don't buy from Petco or a chain. Unless it's in those containers. Because they pass the nets and sh*t in ALL the damn tanks! So you bring thar home to YOUR tank!
      Go to a REAL aquarium. They cost. But you don't get diseased animals.

  • @blackbird5634
    @blackbird5634 2 года назад +424

    As an underwater welder (retired) I have come across these amazing creatures and found this video far too short. It is engaging, compelling even and I was eager to learn more about the interaction between humans and octopuses. ("Octopi'' was how I learned it but the OED says different.)

    • @ulalaFrugilega
      @ulalaFrugilega 2 года назад +14

      It's part of a longer movie. I keep finding bits and pieces in my recommendations every day.
      I think Octopus is Greek, not Latin, that's why the unexpected ending.

    • @iMutt-yy6vf
      @iMutt-yy6vf 2 года назад +23

      Right, "octopus" is Greek, and an "-i" ending is actually a Latin plural...so "octopuses" it is, at least in English!

    • @nicolarollinson4381
      @nicolarollinson4381 2 года назад +7

      I was taught tosay Octupai too. I was surprised when this guy said , octopus'

    • @CoRLex-jh5vx
      @CoRLex-jh5vx 2 года назад +15

      Technically I think it should be octopodes, based on the Greek roots

    • @DeathBringer769
      @DeathBringer769 2 года назад +9

      I have seen both octopuses and octopi as both acceptable these days. And to those saying "it's Greek, not Latin!" -- while octopus may ultimately come from Greek it had a stay in New Latin before arriving here, which is where it probably picked up the common belief the "-i" ending should be attached.
      Also, what's considered "right" in language is actually dictated by common accepted usage (this is what dictionary writers/scholars actually study to determine what words, spellings and definitions go in the dictionary,) not any hard fast rules or even objective logic, so if enough people use something and understand it out there in common usage, then it becomes "correct," even if it seems weird to us or contradictory to past history.

  • @Twerkulies
    @Twerkulies Год назад +6

    I had a pet octopus as a teen and I named it Krakey. I loved adding small toy boats to its tank and it would push and pull them around and even sink some. It was awesome. RIP Krakey, you were my only octopus I ever had. Now I wanna get another one.

    • @umbrasyl
      @umbrasyl 10 месяцев назад +2

      They're not pets

    • @Twerkulies
      @Twerkulies 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@umbrasyl The ones in the video are not pets, they're being studied, but you can get an octopus for a pet for $50 to $1000. Depending on age and species. They're really fun. However, the smaller ones used for pets rarely live past 1.5 years in peak condition.

  • @the-trustees
    @the-trustees 11 дней назад

    So lucky to have such an amazing companion.

  • @GimmeMonie
    @GimmeMonie 2 года назад +40

    Can't stop thinking about how clean that little aquarium is 🤩

  • @StinkySeaGoat
    @StinkySeaGoat 2 года назад +802

    As someone on the spectrum, having an octopus as a therapy animal would be a total dream come true! Sadly they don’t live very long but the bonds they form with humans is said to extend beyond that of mankind and animal, since cephalopods are such intelligent animals and have such a unique biology, they should get more praise in the world then they already do

    • @CompoundingTime
      @CompoundingTime 2 года назад +65

      I'd recommend my octopus teacher on netflix if you wanna see a special bond between a man and an octopus

    • @mrstaller
      @mrstaller 2 года назад +27

      @@CompoundingTime I second this recommendation. I felt SO many emotions watching that documentary. Powerful to watch.

    • @joyfuljoyful6598
      @joyfuljoyful6598 2 года назад +33

      I couldn't imagine caging any creatures in tanks or cages other than for breeding purposes or saving them from extinction it's damned cruel inhumane, imagine the mental torment they must go through?

    • @Arcticstar69
      @Arcticstar69 2 года назад +6

      I certainly agree. We need to observe the world closer.
      Time to change.

    • @beaugotdrums7821
      @beaugotdrums7821 2 года назад +4

      @@CompoundingTime stop eating animals

  • @minussoup9183
    @minussoup9183 Год назад +10

    Prob he has the most exotic pet out of all of his friends and family

  • @LillianGreenHiLilly
    @LillianGreenHiLilly Год назад +23

    That was beautiful to watch. Such wonderful friendly intelligent creatures.

  • @danratsnapnames
    @danratsnapnames 2 года назад +37

    actually having owned one of these as a pet, as well as many other salt water fish as well as many fresh water fish, i can tell you that the level of intelegence with salt water life is far beyond those of freshwater, i've seen fish play just as much. and they also respond to music, mine would actually dance and change colors when i played certian types of music, and other types he would change color to a dark color and almost scald at me until i changed it.. funny part was that his favorite was heavy metal metalica, and his favorite of all was "and justice for all" which was amazing to see him litterally head bang when i played it. ive had fish that would get excited whenever my kids would enter the room and entise them to play along. amazing stuff.. really, we should be looking at using sounds and light more than objects for study. because they do respond increditably with sound and light.

    • @sitcomsTV
      @sitcomsTV Год назад +4

      All live creatures are smart in their own way. Many interact with us - we are the dumb ones not to notice it. The majority of humans eat cow meat. This is also an intelligent creature, prone to have recognition abilities and affection.
      We are, however, carnivorous. There's no harm in eating animals. But we should keep a balance in killing and consumption. Like farmers used to do. No one better to understand the bound one creates with animals, even when they know its necessary to give them an end.

    • @WastedTalent-
      @WastedTalent- Год назад +7

      I worked in pet stores for around 20 years. Sometimes fish can be at the store for months on end. I had a Dogface Puffer come in that was near death. I nursed him back to health and hand fed him. He was like having a little dog in water. I would put my hand in and he'd swim into it and back and forth for pets. He'd gently took food from my fingers. He eventually learned his name, Rover. He could be hiding behind a rock and I would be at the other side of the room and call his name. He'd immediately come out, wagging and flashing from dark to light, waiting for me to come over to the tank. I was so upset when someone bought him. They promised me I could come and visit anytime (they owned a store) and that they'd take good care of him. I stopped in a few weeks later and the conditions he was living in was terrible. I had something to say to them about that. A couple months later, they came in looking for freshwater fish. They killed him and were switching the tank over. He was better off at the store in a 10 gallon tank than in the 120 gallon hellhole they put him in.

    • @sitcomsTV
      @sitcomsTV Год назад +4

      @@WastedTalent- When you bound with an animal you better not be apart from it. Otherwise, when others take them to be their own, you would surely feel your heart pressed telling you something is not quite right. The news the pet died soon after makes you realize it was a bad choise.

    • @danratsnapnames
      @danratsnapnames Год назад +2

      @@WastedTalent- YEP. thats why i cant work at pet stores.. dont get attached.. cause other owners will never be as good as you. sad really. but true. i was very amazed at how pronounced personalities are with salt water fish, and the scale of difference between them and freshwater. it brought an entirely new respect for larger and longer lived sea life, because if a short lived small fish can have such a huge amount of personality, i can only imagine what something like a dolphin or whale would have.

    • @MichaelWinter-ss6lx
      @MichaelWinter-ss6lx 8 месяцев назад

      Good idea, with the sound and light. Most animals seem to prefer metal. My parrakeet used to flee to the farthesr corner of the house when my dad used the stereo. In India they even control cobras with flute music.

  • @segua
    @segua 2 года назад +290

    I’m so sad they don’t live so long. Such a friendship in this world is needed

    • @ToreDL87
      @ToreDL87 2 года назад +25

      Yeah, but then again 3-5 years is pretty long considering they're largely just made up of tissue!

    • @fubberpish3614
      @fubberpish3614 Год назад +22

      @@ToreDL87 3-5 years is pretty generous, even some of the longest-lived species like the Giant Pacific Octopus can only reach about 4 years. I would say 1-2 years is more typical for most octopus species. Keep in mind that this is total lifespan - an adult octopus in an aquarium may only have a few months to a year of it's natural lifespan left (not due to any mistreatment, they just have naturally short lifespans)

    • @boofuls
      @boofuls 9 месяцев назад +1

      I thought for a second is was going to solve the Rubik's cube 😂

  • @Food4thought1234
    @Food4thought1234 День назад

    It’s been know for a while they are highly intelligent. To keep it in such a small space is inhumane. Them knowing this is monstrous.

  • @johnsrabe
    @johnsrabe 24 дня назад

    Yes, when you think about it, it really is remarkable that such a highly evolved creature would even try to commune or communicate with such an unevolved creature.

  • @bluehorizons2508
    @bluehorizons2508 2 года назад +28

    Many years back now as a young man, I was snorkelling by a peninsula of rocks in the Mediterranean just off the Spanish Costa del Sol when I found myself being eyed very closely like this by a big octopus with two of its arms stretched between big rocks.. It was no more than a metre away and, despite my naturally curious inclination to swim even closer, I admit to being more than a little taken aback by its apparently sudden appearance and so after a brief moment slowly turned and left the creature to its own devices. It was an amazing experience, for sure, its watchful look so alien and yet so human. You don't ever forget things like that.

  • @QualeQualeson
    @QualeQualeson 2 года назад +255

    With an intelligence that reaches well into the capacity for abstract thinking, one might ask the question if the octopus finds the idea of confinement as intolerable as a human. Not in the sense of the limited size of the space or the quality of the habitat, but simply the fact that it cannot choose to leave if it wants to.

    • @rolebo1
      @rolebo1 2 года назад +33

      Octopuses in captivity are very likely to try to escape.

    • @skapaloka222
      @skapaloka222 2 года назад +39

      most fish are in their own little world in the tank, but octopi and other intelligent marine animals know that they are stuck in there and we are stuck out here, thats why having an octopus is so tedious, because if you dont entertain it sufficiently, it escapes

    • @mnomadvfx
      @mnomadvfx 2 года назад +16

      "but simply the fact that it cannot choose to leave if it wants to."
      Just as octopi can easily get into things they can get out of them too.
      Often aquariums have to be extremely careful about where they keep an octopus lest they go crawlabout and munch on the other residents at night.

    • @bipedalbob
      @bipedalbob 2 года назад +4

      @@skapaloka222 the plural of octopus is octopuses,
      Not trying to be a grammar freak but you might as well know.

    • @wilfordshiell9367
      @wilfordshiell9367 2 года назад +10

      @@bipedalbob We all learned octopi for plural. I think they changed it to octopuses to pander a bit. Octopuses is rather crude humour I think.

  • @gta-grogu
    @gta-grogu Год назад +8

    Don’t invite The Deep

  • @dangerber23
    @dangerber23 Год назад +5

    This is why I love octopus

  • @pamelaroebuck1079
    @pamelaroebuck1079 2 года назад +376

    Beautiful, sensitive and highly intelligent. No one should be eating or harming these incredible beings.

    • @keentrasborg2566
      @keentrasborg2566 2 года назад +7

      Agreed!

    • @NickMart1985
      @NickMart1985 2 года назад

      They'd eat us if they could.
      Every animal has their traits to one degree or another.
      Nature don't give a fuck.

    • @landgabriel
      @landgabriel 2 года назад

      What do you think they eat?
      Plankton?
      They're predators, just like humans.

    • @keentrasborg2566
      @keentrasborg2566 2 года назад +15

      @Win From Within Yeah, unfortunately

    • @vani7493
      @vani7493 2 года назад +17

      It's the same with other animals. Each is like a person, they just look and communicate differently. Is why I'm opposed to eating any animals, if there is no absolute need to do so. Even "farm animals" are so sensitive, kind, unique and way more intelligent than many people realize

  • @TheGoodContent37
    @TheGoodContent37 2 года назад +3

    "They look at the eyes"
    Octopus thinking: "Why do you keep me prisoner you imbecile human while claiming you are more humane than others".

    • @tokarukoro8196
      @tokarukoro8196 2 года назад

      That is what I was thinking too. Imprisoning an intelligent creature in a small tank is kind of cruel.

  • @mariyam1511
    @mariyam1511 Год назад +2

    1:31 woww
    so adorable house for the adorable octopus 😭❤️✨ luv ya !!

  • @notleviathan855
    @notleviathan855 Год назад

    My uncle had a pet octopus, and instead of owning a TV. He bought a TV stand, and a huge tank and plopped it into his living room. Every single day after work, he'd remove these large glass panels from off the top of the tank, and interact with the octopus.
    Dude had a metric crapton of random cheap kids toys you could find from dollar general. He changed the landscape of the tank once a week, and once every three months either rotated rocks OUT or put 'New' ones in for different configurations.
    He always made the octopus work for it's food, different bottles, sometimes he'd stuff it into a toy and the octopus would use it's tentacles to rotate the food to get it out of the toy. He said it was better than watching TV. Sadly the Octopus died of old age, they don't live very long. But I'm sure that thing had a very fun time trying out new toys often.

  • @maxbacon4828
    @maxbacon4828 2 года назад +8

    How anyone can harm such a beautiful, intelligent animal is beyond me. Fantastic video.

  • @cshank2807
    @cshank2807 2 года назад +160

    we used to have this snail in our aquarium that somehow figured out how to play kinda like the octopus did with the pill bottle. the snail would always go over to this bubble strip thingy then it would release and just float up with all the bubbles then around with the current until it slowly sank to the floor, immediately it would start heading straight back to that bubble thingy and do it all again, over and over. It just blew me away, this snail was actually playing! after that I wasn't too surprised to learn snails are actually related to octopus squids and cuttlefish and the like

    • @jowenspicer2667
      @jowenspicer2667 2 года назад +11

      There's a subreddit dedicated to this phenomena called 'Parasnailing' I highly recommend it!

    • @cshank2807
      @cshank2807 2 года назад +4

      @@jowenspicer2667 thanks, didn't know it was actually a 'thing'. it sure does look like a lot of fun, and especially since it's not like there's a whole lot to do as a snail in captivity

    • @eriksaari4430
      @eriksaari4430 2 года назад

      snails dont vave brain to speak of. its probably some instinctive behavior.

    • @lockandloadlikehell
      @lockandloadlikehell 2 года назад +3

      @@eriksaari4430 right
      Just instinctively playing

  • @MalcolmXtreme
    @MalcolmXtreme Год назад +4

    You know I can never look at a octopus the same after The Boys.

  • @MADGUNSMONSTER
    @MADGUNSMONSTER Год назад +5

    Be careful with that octopus when The Deep is around.

  • @invisiblefly2454
    @invisiblefly2454 2 года назад +61

    I gave up eating octopus (it's common along coastal cities). I finally recently recognized how smart these creatures are (it's estimated to be the same as a 3 or 4 year old human toddler's intelligence) and I just don't feel right eating them anymore.

    • @XEinstein
      @XEinstein 2 года назад +31

      Yeah, I agree: please don't eat human toddlers anymore.

    • @k2ggers961
      @k2ggers961 2 года назад +8

      Honestly I'm fine eating them because they only live 2-4 years max, and most of the big ones caught are literally weeks or months from death so I don't feel as bad.

    • @adrianwilliams6908
      @adrianwilliams6908 2 года назад +4

      I am happy to eat either

    • @Tjalve70
      @Tjalve70 2 года назад +5

      @@XEinstein Come on. Just one more isn't going to be a problem. It's not like they're an endangered species.

    • @morinor1340
      @morinor1340 2 года назад +4

      Other animals are intelligent and capable of emotion too, yet they are eaten, by predators just like us humans.
      Its just how it be.
      I dont eat ehm cuz i dont eat anything out of the ocean, theres no reason to eat marine animals if you dont live in coastal regions, especially since many of them are becoming endangered due to overfishing.

  • @Strype13
    @Strype13 2 года назад +43

    [4:07] What is it doing with this cool little maneuver, I wonder? I don't think I've ever seen them sitting still and twirling their little tenties like that before. They're such awesome and intriguing critters!

  • @julieolson1402
    @julieolson1402 3 месяца назад

    Kinda makes your feel relieved that they depend on an underwater environment. They can be spooky little beings!

  • @g-man2507
    @g-man2507 6 месяцев назад +1

    They seem like they came from another world, like they arrived when a comet crashed and somehow survived and adapted to our world.

  • @alc4117
    @alc4117 2 года назад +238

    if octopuses are really that intelligent then that octopus is intelligent enough to know that it's bored as hell stuck in that guy's house

    • @hoodman420
      @hoodman420 2 года назад +25

      It also would know if it tried to leave it would die.

    • @DelRae
      @DelRae 2 года назад +44

      @@hoodman420 some octopuses go for it anyways cause they’d rather die than continue to be bored

    • @aminahreviewsstuff
      @aminahreviewsstuff 2 года назад +8

      So sad really

    • @ulalaFrugilega
      @ulalaFrugilega 2 года назад +48

      @@hoodman420 I've heard of an octopus in a large aquarium who left their tank at night, broke into crabs' tanks and gorged, then went back. Took staff a while to find out how those crabs died!

    • @hokieduck
      @hokieduck 2 года назад +33

      My very first thought! You keep that extremely intelligent animal in a tiny terrible prison.

  • @TheWtfnonamez
    @TheWtfnonamez 2 года назад +15

    I watched another video about a marine facility that was having specimens mysteriously disappear. After several months they discovered that the octopus they kept there, had worked out how to escape his tank, and at night he we sneaking into the other area of the facility, eating the specimens, and then sneaking back into his tank. They are not only smart, but they are crafty too. This indicates to me that they have some grasp of empathy

    • @fubberpish3614
      @fubberpish3614 Год назад +10

      there's more to this story, which makes it even more impressive - the aquarium had night guards that patrolled the aquarium at night. none of them noticed anything strange going on with the octopus. turns out, the octopus had memorised the route and timing of the patrol routes, so it could be back it it's own tank with the lid closed whenever a guard passed by. crazy

    • @louiseskip3488
      @louiseskip3488 Год назад +1

      @@fubberpish3614 amazing, how desperate were the prisoners in the tanks for natural food. Sad.

    • @fubberpish3614
      @fubberpish3614 Год назад +6

      @@louiseskip3488 this isn't a behaviour caused by captivity, wild octopuses will do this too, but instead of aquarium tanks, it's tidal pools. and what you you mean "desperate for natural food"?? do you think aquariums feed their animals some kind of synthetic food sludge? they get fed pieces of seafood not unlike what they would eat in the wild, such as shrimp, scallops, crab, fish, and squid

  • @PenguinDT
    @PenguinDT Месяц назад

    I just can't get over how this cute fellow lives in a Lego house.

  • @teesense5502
    @teesense5502 10 месяцев назад +1

    Heidi seems social and LONELY

  • @dirtydirtmcgogurt
    @dirtydirtmcgogurt 2 года назад +97

    Since he was saying that octopi are very self-aware, do you think that the octopus is posing for the camera at any point in the video?
    "Paint me like one of your French-girls, Jack."

  • @saranebeling6375
    @saranebeling6375 Месяц назад +1

    I get sad when friends eat octopus. I could never do it!! They are amazing creatures

  • @kathleenmholland8055
    @kathleenmholland8055 7 месяцев назад +4

    These amazing creatures have long fascinated me. I hope that I may, someday, get to meet an octopus.

  • @nfactorial4074
    @nfactorial4074 2 года назад +118

    Not sure why people find them creepy I think they’re so beautiful and so incredible to watch in the water

    • @ICYMIINMIY
      @ICYMIINMIY Год назад +4

      Slimy
      Tentacles
      Underwater and it’s depths
      Poisonous
      Intelligent
      Doctor Octopus

    • @umbrasyl
      @umbrasyl 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@ICYMIINMIY Stop consuming so much media, it's rotting your brain

  • @SpinozillaSaurian
    @SpinozillaSaurian 2 года назад +630

    There are many benefits to being a marine biologist

    • @InVinoVeratas
      @InVinoVeratas 2 года назад +11

      On one hand, I'd love to do what they do, but then the prospect of being on a boat or in a submarine is kind of scary to me. Also, the slight Thalassophobia doesn't help.

    • @user-dk5vj2br1o
      @user-dk5vj2br1o 2 года назад +3

      Ik i now wish i hadnt become a nurse..ive always been fascinated with the oceans. N the secrects of the deepest of the deeps she hides away..if i was a billionaire id leave behind a hefty donation tords the ocean projects making it become "easier" n availability to have access to the depths of the deep...ect.cuz honestly space seems be "more" important n has the founds n the big bucks n it pisses me off!

    • @joedavidson6556
      @joedavidson6556 2 года назад +4

      Lol boats aren’t scary. I make a living on one. Maintenance is key. The boat will go through more than most humans can take. I recommend spending some time at sea. It’s quite nice.

    • @datkidd4700
      @datkidd4700 2 года назад

      Seven Hunnid is an underrated RUclipsr, his videos are good i watch him & this channel most of the time.. they’re both similar channels..😩😩

    • @poione42
      @poione42 2 года назад +1

      Love the aquarium hobby..
      Best way to relax is in my fish room.
      Such an amazing animal and awesome setup

  • @Renegade_Minds
    @Renegade_Minds 4 месяца назад

    Never wanted an octopus friend so much in my life before now.

  • @robertengland8769
    @robertengland8769 5 дней назад

    Octopuss's garden in the shade.

  • @roger8990
    @roger8990 2 года назад +148

    “They are looking back”
    That’s why u don’t keep an octopus in ur room at night

    • @sonofliberty78
      @sonofliberty78 2 года назад +2

      Nah. Octopuses are cool. Never trust a squid, though. 😉

    • @mnomadvfx
      @mnomadvfx 2 года назад +1

      You're far too big to be considered food even by these sneaky buggers.
      Don't keep any other sea creatures within a houses reach of them though, the octopus will just go exploring and eat them while you aren't looking.

    • @XXLRebel
      @XXLRebel 2 года назад

      With the tank top open

    • @roger8990
      @roger8990 2 года назад

      @@mnomadvfx lol they really don’t need to eat u whole

    • @krane15
      @krane15 2 года назад

      Don't worry. I doubt if you would fit in its stomach.

  • @shadowfilm7980
    @shadowfilm7980 2 года назад +151

    Fascinating. Never seen this before. Such interaction between a human and an octopus. The octopus was so curious about everything. About her. Glad to see that the tank is large. Not small. More needed room for your octopus.

    • @GodofStories
      @GodofStories 2 года назад +6

      Def watch the Netflix Doc : My Octopus Teacher, highly recommend!

    • @hetspookjee
      @hetspookjee 2 года назад +5

      The tank is really small by any measurable way when compared to their wild environment and this is a surefire way to mistreat an intelligent animal as they are. This scientist seems to lack the common sense that locking up a highly intelligent animal as an octopus is no way to treat it. If this scientist really cared so much about the octopus and their behaviour he would've swam in the sea for hours and days like the octopus teacher did. That is one sure way to show the appreciation an intelligent animal deserves. This is no different than a circus artist calling himself a scientist because he writes stuff done and tells a compelling story with good cinematography.

    • @brutalenergy2525
      @brutalenergy2525 Год назад

      He’s dead

    • @louiseskip3488
      @louiseskip3488 Год назад

      @@brutalenergy2525 whose dead?

    • @bluedeep1707
      @bluedeep1707 Год назад +2

      You should watch the Documentary movie "my octopus teacher"...after I watched I never ate octopus again.

  • @kitkat261
    @kitkat261 Год назад +2

    Looks like it's levitating through the air in the thumbnail

  • @jessicabristol1153
    @jessicabristol1153 Месяц назад

    What I find most fascinating is that she spends most of her time the colour of the living room walls: yellow. But its never mentioned or noted in the documentary.

  • @PotatoPatatoVonSpudsworth
    @PotatoPatatoVonSpudsworth 2 года назад +48

    Octopi are amazing creatures, but don't try getting one as a pet. They're too intelligent to be treated like a goldfish, and will grow depressed without continued stimulation.

    • @ulalaFrugilega
      @ulalaFrugilega 2 года назад +4

      Just like pigs, by the way. And chickens.

  • @diane9247
    @diane9247 2 года назад +69

    WOW! The half and half color stage was amazing! I would never guess they could make a straight line on their bodies. This is a very enjoyable series.

    • @anti-ethniccleansing465
      @anti-ethniccleansing465 2 года назад +1

      Oh yeah, they can do geometric patterns and everything. Very impressive camouflage!

  • @user-wc9uj5tn2m
    @user-wc9uj5tn2m 4 месяца назад

    In high school science class we had a salt water tank. We had a small octopus in this tank. I took care of this tank and the octopus. It became so friendly that when i came into class it would change colors and reach out of the tank for contact. We kept it for three months and returned it to the tide pools where it had been found. I visited those tide pools for a long time it remembered me. One day it was gone.

  • @var309
    @var309 Год назад +5

    Have never understood our fascination with aliens when we have such wonderful creatures to study and play with

    • @batacumba
      @batacumba 5 месяцев назад

      Some people think they actually are an alien species. lol.

  • @birdsworldvn4196
    @birdsworldvn4196 2 года назад +85

    the fish tank is so beautiful, they are like in the wild, the octopus is playing in the tank with the objects in it

  • @bassmunk
    @bassmunk 2 года назад +110

    "My Octopus Teacher" on Netflix is a must watch! You'll see all of this stuff in full in that documentary. Very interesting and emotional.

  • @Teratoma.that.speaks
    @Teratoma.that.speaks Месяц назад +1

    What would it be like to meet an alien? Well apparently we’re gonna poke it and then we’re gonna bring it ,home as a pet.

  • @portatil8676
    @portatil8676 11 месяцев назад +1

    Octopuses are such unique animals, I love them.

  • @rakeenan3
    @rakeenan3 2 года назад +327

    I love them so so so much! What wonderfully intelligent and magical creatures they are! 💕🐙💕

    • @festival3051
      @festival3051 2 года назад +2

      Majestic Beak

    • @footfault1941
      @footfault1941 2 года назад

      And good or not ...... tasty, too!

    • @doctornowhere
      @doctornowhere 2 года назад

      are you afraid of misgendering an octopus

    • @MarriedToAsmo
      @MarriedToAsmo 2 года назад

      EVEN INTELLIGENT THAN TIKTOKERS

    • @thecheshire5762
      @thecheshire5762 2 года назад +4

      @@doctornowhere OP is saying they in a plural sense as the whole species

  • @InVinoVeratas
    @InVinoVeratas 2 года назад +18

    1:24 Now I wish Octopi throughout the Ocean had elaborate Lego Homes.

    • @InVinoVeratas
      @InVinoVeratas 2 года назад

      @Jefferson Thomas The insurance on it is definitely much better as well.

  • @WizzRacing
    @WizzRacing 7 месяцев назад +1

    Their memory retention is amazing....

  • @crage222
    @crage222 Год назад +1

    I would like see a live action short video of an octopus, that lives inside a replica home that fits in its tank.
    He walks through his front door with a little fedora on. Sits in his little chair.
    4:58

  • @patrickmcginty3234
    @patrickmcginty3234 2 года назад +207

    I could imagine that they could have built their own civilization by now if they aren't hampered by their 1 year life span. They certainly seem smart enough for it.

    • @bipedalbob
      @bipedalbob 2 года назад +49

      Actually most live 2-3 years and some up to 5 , but I get your point, if they had our life span we might be the one kept as curious pets.

    • @solblackguy
      @solblackguy 2 года назад +4

      @@bipedalbob The problem is the males die when they mate.

    • @bipedalbob
      @bipedalbob 2 года назад +14

      And the female dies after her first batch of eggs hatches, so much for the theory of evolution

    • @MasterSilvergreen
      @MasterSilvergreen 2 года назад +5

      @@bipedalbob yea until the first does not die, than it is evolution time^^

    • @somelokyguy6466
      @somelokyguy6466 2 года назад +20

      @@bipedalbob Evolution exists to optimise the production and sustainability of offspring.
      When the offspring becomes self sufficient, the original creature is practically useless to the world, it's nothing more than a big ball of food that consumes other food. Evolution is what caused octopi to die after their production of offspring as it's the most optimised life cycle.

  • @kirielvids
    @kirielvids 2 года назад +55

    Octopus are my favorite sea creatures. They're so intelligent it blows my mind. Humans have this idea that we're the smartest creatures on the planet just because we took control over everything we could but I sincerely think octopi are either pretty close or just as intelligent. This one has a friend, plays with toys, etc. In other cases they reason and make emotional responses and solve problems, even outsmart us to make escapes. If they could speak our language I wonder what they would say. Our intelligences are so vastly different not in quality but in how they work, they're the best.
    I loved watching Heidi and Lauren, it seems less like Heidi is a pet and more like a friend. It's fascinating.

    • @kme
      @kme 2 года назад +2

      Heidi probably thinks/thought Lauren is the pet. hehehe

    • @SanguineMalcontent
      @SanguineMalcontent 2 года назад

      Octopuses are very intelligent but they are nowhere near humans, few are (the smartest, crows, are estimated to be about as intelligent as a 7-year-old) , we are millions of years ahead of any other known species on this planet.

  • @carolkewley7410
    @carolkewley7410 7 месяцев назад

    "My human is showing impressive documentary-making capabilities of his own."

  • @johnegan1975
    @johnegan1975 Год назад +1

    Can't watch without thinking the Deep would be a huge fan of this idea.

    • @dexternever3146
      @dexternever3146 Год назад

      bruhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh........ Starlight will stalk him for sure

  • @debranielsen2002
    @debranielsen2002 2 года назад +20

    I started creeped out, and I ended up being fascinated. 🐙 How beautiful the bond between the two females of different species.