The amazing brains and morphing skin of octopuses and other cephalopods | Roger Hanlon

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  • Опубликовано: 22 дек 2024

Комментарии • 292

  • @hannahpumpkins4359
    @hannahpumpkins4359 5 лет назад +160

    I used to live in the Florida Keys and was in the ocean all the time - sometimes 2-4x/day on average. I loved playing with the Cuttlefish - I'd bring bracelets with colored gemstones on them, a water ring game, waterproof picture cards, etc. They always loved that stuff - you could clearly see them learning, and after a bit they began to figure out how to communicate with me through their body language! These creatures are very very smart... Ever since then I have not eaten squid, octopus, etc - they seemed to be as smart as young children, so to me killing one was a sin...

  • @noellejones7164
    @noellejones7164 5 лет назад +250

    “one two three four five and now i’m a seaweed”

  • @timsmith6675
    @timsmith6675 5 лет назад +29

    Since a boy in the 70's, I have always loved cephalopods. I had 2 Jacques Cousteau books on squid and octopuses. To me, intelligence is a measurement of problem solving to your benefit and these animals surely show that attribute.

  • @lestranged
    @lestranged 5 лет назад +101

    I remember watching a nature show that had a segment about an aquarium that had an octopus in one tank, and some fish in the neighboring tank. There was a few feet of shelf between the tanks, they were not right up against eachother. . The scientists started noticing there would be fewer fish in the fishtank when they came in every morning. They set up a camera to film at night. The octopus was climbing out of his own tank, creeping along the shelf, and going into the fish tank to eat some fish. Then it would creep BACK TO HIS OWN TANK and sit there looking all innocent in the morning. They are smart af. Then in another story they put a small fish in a glass jar of water with a screw-on top. They put the jar into the octopus tank. The octopus could see the fish and wanted to eat it. It surrounded the jar and just kept investigating with it's arms, and it quickly figured out how to UNSCREW the lid of the jar to get the fish. That is a complicated action, not simple like just squeezing or hitting something until it breaks. You have to hold the jar tightly with one arm and twist the lid with the other arm.

    • @بِلَادٱلرَّافِدَيْنبِلَادٱلرَّ
    • @lestranged
      @lestranged 5 лет назад +10

      @@بِلَادٱلرَّافِدَيْنبِلَادٱلرَّ No for real! search it here in youtube. Octopi are amazingly smart and complex. I accidentally yesterday saw a snippet of a video of someone eating a live octopus ( for a stupid mukbang) and it was terrible to think about an animal with that complex nervous system and brain, maybe even comprehending what was happening. I'm not vegan but can we at least just not torture the creatures we are eating?

    • @liammullen2144
      @liammullen2144 5 лет назад +8

      Here in Canada in 2013 there was an octopus that broke out of it's enclosure at night in a science center when nobody was around and they found it the next day crawling around the floor exploring the facility, it was crazy because the enclosure was secured and locked with weights and mesh and they have no idea to this day how it escaped

    • @benkluit42
      @benkluit42 5 лет назад

      Wow America online, are you a bot or some developing AI in learning, you're definitely not human!!
      Lestrange, it is amazing to see how intelligent these animals are. All life is amazing, live is amazing. At least the idiot made you tell one more interesting story. Oh and go work with animals, in short it just makes you feel good as a human.

    • @بِلَادٱلرَّافِدَيْنبِلَادٱلرَّ
      @بِلَادٱلرَّافِدَيْنبِلَادٱلرَّ 5 лет назад +3

      @@lestranged I agree, it is extremely frustrating to see live octopuses to be considered a delicacy. There are many animals in the ocean that are smarter than people think, like the majority of fish. Have you seen blue planet? There was a fish that used a clam to break open another type of Mollusk. Interesting stuff.

  • @sonnyjimm23
    @sonnyjimm23 5 лет назад +48

    I love that as humans, we look at these creatures with awe and wonder like children at their first magic show. I dislike however, that there are also humans looking at this and thinking 'How can we turn this into a weapon?'

    • @alexmadio5785
      @alexmadio5785 5 лет назад

      There are also humans trying to figure out how to make tastier food out of them.

    • @mikaelsvensson410
      @mikaelsvensson410 4 года назад +3

      the military have been working on that but not as a weapon, but more like harry potters invisible cloak...

    • @gaminghunt5837
      @gaminghunt5837 3 года назад

      @@romanski5811 not at all.not justified.that is stupidity.

    • @gaminghunt5837
      @gaminghunt5837 3 года назад

      @@romanski5811 yes

    • @gaminghunt5837
      @gaminghunt5837 3 года назад

      @@romanski5811 what happened,loser

  • @lwispe
    @lwispe 5 лет назад +95

    There's a fascinating book by author Peter Godfrey-Smith called "Other Minds" about this very subject, well worth reading!

    • @sonnyjimm23
      @sonnyjimm23 5 лет назад +4

      This is his talk...
      ruclips.net/video/iENXfnOobzw/видео.html

    • @DanielVerberne
      @DanielVerberne 5 лет назад

      Great tip! Thank you Louis-Philippe!

    • @brianmcgoldrick9529
      @brianmcgoldrick9529 4 года назад +2

      i know i'm late to the party but if you're looking for recommended reading i cannot speak highly enough of martin moynihans book communication and noncommunication by cephalopods. check it out!

    • @lwispe
      @lwispe 4 года назад

      @@brianmcgoldrick9529 thanks!

    • @veena9922
      @veena9922 3 года назад +1

      I have just started reading this book …..it is really worth reading and makes one feel so humble at the wonderful ways of the evolution !!!!!

  •  5 лет назад +228

    Damn I could watch this guy talk for hours on this subject! It's a shame it just lasted 13 minutes.

    • @Trey4x4
      @Trey4x4 5 лет назад +1

      It went by quick

    • @capajc565
      @capajc565 5 лет назад +2

      Check out the “Teuthology” episode of a podcast called Ologies. Good stuff.

    • @waynethegreat23
      @waynethegreat23 5 лет назад +2

      Yeah I don't know why they time this stuff just let them talk for an hour or more then cut down a video to make it smaller and post both

    • @thephilosopher7173
      @thephilosopher7173 5 лет назад +1

      @@waynethegreat23 It's because he only started this research a few years ago so there's more they have yet to discover!

  • @user-vn7ce5ig1z
    @user-vn7ce5ig1z 5 лет назад +64

    When you think about it, it's absolutely mind-blowing that they can do all that, and so fast no less. Imagine if you had the ability to change the color and height of your skin and wanted to camouflage. Just try to think about the monumental task of controlling each of those thousands of individual "skin pixels" in a split second in just the right way to match the surroundings. 🤯

    • @rdooski
      @rdooski 5 лет назад +3

      Dang your username is just -. Thats pretty awesome.

    • @ghostrecon3214
      @ghostrecon3214 5 лет назад

      It definitely sounds challenging, and it is until you get used to it,

    • @MrDarren690
      @MrDarren690 2 года назад

      @@ghostrecon3214 Yup yup. I think the color changing actually comes as naturally to them as breathing does to us.

  • @noahpage7459
    @noahpage7459 5 лет назад +93

    Incredible to think humans could adopt this behavior with technology

    • @ReinierRuneScape
      @ReinierRuneScape 5 лет назад +7

      Noah Page They even create the front of a train based on the tip of the mouth of a certain quick prey diving bird to reduce the noise when cutting threw the wind. Many things are inspired by nature and there are books about it too.

    • @rayc.lozano7100
      @rayc.lozano7100 5 лет назад

      😟walperstyle 🚶‍♀️🧖🏾‍♀️💃🧖🏾‍♀️

    • @thephilosopher7173
      @thephilosopher7173 5 лет назад

      For sure, if anything what he's referring to is gonna be a sort of computer clothing. Computers have 'nervous systems' in the motherboard, but if we apply that to textures/colors within a wiring system in our clothing or even our other tech, the possibilities are endless!

  • @DanielVerberne
    @DanielVerberne 5 лет назад +5

    Cephalopods are fast becoming my favourite class of animal - I once saw Squid being hauled up by fisherman and my reaction was distress - I literally cried at these beautiful creatures being caught. There is something deeply ‘kinlike’ to these creatures - the eyes, the hugely clever mimicry, that amazing, amazing skin! And finally, if someone told me that a particular class of marine invertebrates actually evolved on another planet before arriving here - I’d say it was the Cephalopods.

  • @peruface
    @peruface 5 лет назад +33

    straight up Aliens

    • @artificialexistence2965
      @artificialexistence2965 5 лет назад +2

      @Jaime Alonzo You base your word on other men's opinions. Think for yourself for once.

  • @BrigidC123
    @BrigidC123 5 лет назад +7

    I bet the first person that see the amazing camouflage of the Octopus thought they was hallucinating when they see that amazing event.

  • @bronsonelliott3175
    @bronsonelliott3175 5 лет назад +4

    I can never get enough of Ted Talks, thanks for uploading all this awesome content and for giving me the means to satiate my thirst for knowledge. I'm learning things I never thought I wanted to learn in the first place and I love it. Thanks to the whole team who makes this happen and for every person that shares with us what they have learned. Much love from Canada, thanks again!

  • @ajkourafas
    @ajkourafas 5 лет назад +38

    "Brains are really good at control." he says.....
    Really? Is that why i have another new guitar.. yet can't pay my rent? Again?

    • @DenverBlazer
      @DenverBlazer 5 лет назад +9

      From one guitarist to another, brother, just pay your rent. Your playing will be better because you won't have money stress running in the background of your brain. Even if you don't notice it consciously, it will affect how you play.

    • @WEEKEND-AT-BURNIES
      @WEEKEND-AT-BURNIES 4 года назад +1

      You can never have too many guitars, makes me understand the cerebral defect women have for buying shoes

    • @animationspace8550
      @animationspace8550 4 года назад

      No brain is worse. You just drift with barely any motory response. Imagine not paying rent, and not being able to figure out how to get off the floor.

  • @PPYTAO
    @PPYTAO 5 лет назад +7

    I fell in love with cuttlefish in 2014 when I watched kings of camoflauge on RUclips.

  • @rickharold69
    @rickharold69 5 лет назад +23

    Super awesome. Thanks for the video!

  • @leviroch
    @leviroch 5 лет назад +7

    all-in-1 gillie suit. . . awesome

  • @MOSMASTERING
    @MOSMASTERING 5 лет назад +2

    I'd love to see it try and camoflage on top of a fractal pattern - seeing as the rocks and pattern on it are more similar to a fractal than a checkerboard.

  • @monicaaiken9746
    @monicaaiken9746 3 года назад +1

    Beautiful, amazing! I love them! Especially the adorable cuttlefish and how they fend off on the one side, but then flush all fresh and friendly for the female on the other side. How sweet is that?! Just think: ink that you could control in your skin, like tattoos you could switch out painlessly and in seconds almost like led signs rotate through ads. I mean it is creepy, but mesmerizing and incredible they have such similar cognitive abilities to a 4 year old human. I’m sure they have many other logical abilities and awarenesses we have only barely scratched the surface. They’re fascinating. I can’t help but love them, even as they kind of horrify me in the same breath. Shape-shifters, seems almost alien, and yet we share this earth and share a common ancestor of some worm. It really is out there, isn’t it? Iridescent, light sensitive skin! What a trip. So awesome.

  • @deano43
    @deano43 5 лет назад +3

    I love this channel, I feel a little smarter with every video.

  • @Chris-fg7jo
    @Chris-fg7jo 5 лет назад +9

    I’ll never eat another octopus salad again

  • @johnroberts838
    @johnroberts838 5 лет назад +8

    Absolutely Fascinating, Thank you👍👍👍.
    Melbourne, Australia.

    • @radjabomarov8014
      @radjabomarov8014 5 лет назад

      Really?

    • @johnroberts838
      @johnroberts838 5 лет назад

      Radjab Omarov Really Really!
      I am sorry if my opinion upsets you, I ask for your forgiveness.
      Take care.♥️

    • @radjabomarov8014
      @radjabomarov8014 5 лет назад +1

      @@johnroberts838 Your opinion very glad me) You are the best of the best😉

  • @sherifhany386
    @sherifhany386 5 лет назад +2

    I hate how there is too many words i don't understand, but i don't hate the talk for it.. i hate myself for not knowing it..
    Awesome talk!

  • @Noukz37
    @Noukz37 5 лет назад +13

    Finally I have a video to show to my Chinese science students when they ask me why is octopus my favorite animal. :-)

    • @Ace-yv8op
      @Ace-yv8op 4 года назад

      You probably made them hungry

  • @brenojust6436
    @brenojust6436 3 года назад +1

    It's amazing to see them underwater, they're such an incredible specie

  • @Seamo57
    @Seamo57 5 лет назад +6

    Wow!
    Now multiply this by the trillions of “possibly habitable” planets in the known universe...
    And you thought you were unique?!
    We are basic in our complexities... & we amaze ourselves constantly!
    Life is so beautiful!

  • @metafuel
    @metafuel 5 лет назад +3

    Need more of this man. There's more to intelligence than human thought - or think.

  • @KortovElphame
    @KortovElphame 5 лет назад +7

    *"I'm not saying it's aliens...."*

  • @joannot6706
    @joannot6706 5 лет назад +22

    Cloaking technology

  • @ElowenFaye
    @ElowenFaye 5 лет назад +2

    Octopodes are my favourite animals. I'm more than pleased about this video :)

  • @evahlemons5463
    @evahlemons5463 5 лет назад +2

    This was so awesome! Octopuses are my favorite!!!❤ 🐙

  •  5 лет назад +2

    Wow great talk on an incredibly fascinating subject.

  • @chequerswot2373
    @chequerswot2373 5 лет назад

    the best ted talks are the ones with serious investigation results

  • @andyvaldez212
    @andyvaldez212 4 месяца назад

    Absolutely the most beautiful creatures. I held tentacles with one in Roatan, he was so kind and gently put his suckers on my finger. Checked me out real quick and let go. Honestly one of my best ever experiences in the water

  • @badformatuk
    @badformatuk 5 лет назад

    How do we truly know what that actually look like? Is the form they take passed down like fashion ?

  • @capt.samvimes768
    @capt.samvimes768 5 лет назад +10

    Outstanding fantastic animals. I’ve had the pleasure of getting up close and personal with a squid then he inked me and poof! He was gone. Wonderful.

    • @dafttool
      @dafttool 5 лет назад +9

      BigDudeUK I’ve had dates like that before.

  • @ajaz3384
    @ajaz3384 5 лет назад

    Wow, that's probably the inspiration for modern drones that employ active camouflage by using 360 degrees cameras on the upper surface and high resolution LEDs on the bottom surface, thus showing the sky to viewers from earth.

  • @roleplayingwithidiots7455
    @roleplayingwithidiots7455 5 лет назад +1

    So is it possible
    To skin a octo and still have it flesh operational
    And does creating a skin or suit that can mimic the same, does it need multiple visual receptors?
    And can we manipulate a computer to mimic these cognitive pattern with even more precision

  • @tedphillips2501
    @tedphillips2501 5 лет назад +1

    Humboldt squid form packs and communicate strategy to each other through skin patterns. Scary.

    • @sirashley2355
      @sirashley2355 5 лет назад

      whats scary is thinking about the first one who came back from an unsuccessful hunt and gave them all the Locker room halftime speech plus the tactics to succeed. brought them all together as a team and them successfully passed it down the gene pool. this is along the lines of some humans living in huts/tent/yurts/caves/and small clay dwellings and then one day some guy saying "what if we built a couple buildings 1000 times bigger than we ever had out of materials we have to painstakingly dig up miles away i mean huge stones and sheets of limestone weighing in at several tons, in a shaped we have NEVER used before. it will be so large, NO *GIGANTIC* that the construction can never be completed in one NO two lifetimes maybe even hundreds of years. and we shall call hem the pyramids" yeah sometimes earth organisms just end up doing some weird stuff when they get together,extreme comparison i know but like that is not a part of biological evolution you chose to do that, why? you chose to use your skin to coordinate strategy. and then whole day of rabbit hole thoughts come from.

  • @4G12
    @4G12 5 лет назад +8

    The Ceph are coming to clean this planet of this hairless ape infestation.

    • @Mike-om4tv
      @Mike-om4tv 5 лет назад +1

      4G12 they're being pretty damn lazy about it. Getting fished up and eaten by us regularly and all.

  • @lovell8983
    @lovell8983 5 лет назад +5

    amazing
    love your videos!

  • @zavierorlos1948
    @zavierorlos1948 5 лет назад

    ALIENS: "yup, lets pack our bags guys, we can compete against that"

  • @jimberlygridder183
    @jimberlygridder183 5 лет назад +4

    If these creatures can do this...it makes it less of a stretch when considering the possibility abilities of creatures or life from other planets...dimensions...whatever. We have shapeshifting creatures rite here on our own planet. So the idea that a shapeshifting alien could be walking amongst us and we not even know it becomes more feasible.

    • @Mike-om4tv
      @Mike-om4tv 5 лет назад

      James Grider start with actually finding life on other planets before thinking about what they can/cant do

    • @jimberlygridder183
      @jimberlygridder183 5 лет назад

      Mike you think they havnt.....The evidence is overwhelming in terms of sitings of technology that does not exist according to our capabilities on this planet. It came from somewhere else.

  • @Filiolus
    @Filiolus 5 лет назад +1

    Well spoken fella, very interesting too ... i wonder the applications we'll find from them.

  • @nikkiej.5875
    @nikkiej.5875 Год назад

    I find cephalopods such interesting and also very beautiful animals. 🤩

  • @NurulMuliawati
    @NurulMuliawati 5 лет назад

    Nature and His creatures never stop amaze me.

  • @TerraPupaAbyssus
    @TerraPupaAbyssus 5 лет назад +1

    He mentioned using artificial cromatophores for fashion, but I've got a different idea. What if we made computer screens with it? They wouldn't produce their own light, so they wouldn't give people seizures.

  • @broomehome
    @broomehome 5 лет назад +14

    was good and very interesting until the potential applications :(

  • @mfbias4048
    @mfbias4048 4 года назад

    Jaron Lanier mentions this in ‘You are not a gadget’

  • @Stjerneriaq
    @Stjerneriaq 5 лет назад +2

    Fascinating

  •  5 лет назад +1

    Octopuses are my favourite animal!!!

  • @david7putvin
    @david7putvin 5 лет назад +1

    The human ability to learn and recognize complexities in life and teach them. Worldwide. Our language is magic, look at everything around. Good luck enjoying and helping change the world humans🌏🌍🌎

  • @lexxeffectual
    @lexxeffectual 5 лет назад +2

    All hail the mighty Cthulhu brain!!

  • @anna_bo_banna
    @anna_bo_banna 5 лет назад +3

    This is the most amazing thing ever
    💓🥰❤️🐙🦑💕

  • @mmisbach
    @mmisbach 5 лет назад +1

    Octopus, its intelligence is dynamic camouflage. Makes over 100 camouflage decisions per day to stay alive. Learning from Octopus, Cuttlefish, and squid we can possibly manufacture smart materials that change shape and colors on demand. #TEDtalk twitter.com/tedstalkin

  • @sophiewhitaker4008
    @sophiewhitaker4008 4 года назад +1

    Maybe this is the research that went into making Rorschach’s mask.

  • @kamenidriss
    @kamenidriss 5 лет назад +1

    absolutely amazing stuff

  • @benbrown8258
    @benbrown8258 5 лет назад

    I've often wondered could octopus potentially pass down the capacity for new knowledge through RNA? Maybe not RNA but epigenetics activating aspects of RNA and DNA but on a different level we hadn't imagined before with octopus.

  • @FinalStraw
    @FinalStraw 5 лет назад +2

    You see this octopus perambulating along...

  • @ceciliaspears161
    @ceciliaspears161 5 лет назад

    Absolutely amazing!

  • @BurningZa
    @BurningZa 5 лет назад

    Roger Halon reminds me of Miles Dyson. Military is gonna love this new "fashion" tech!

  • @jasoningram4617
    @jasoningram4617 4 года назад

    😇 Fascinating Ted Talk 😇
    Thank You

  • @jk-76
    @jk-76 5 лет назад

    I don't know. The beginning of every good discussion

  • @westonarey2502
    @westonarey2502 5 лет назад

    Excellent discussion about the construction of a very different lifeform. RNA editing, pattern and texture mimicry, memory, problem solving, all this is astounding. What spoils the presentation is the evolutionary tree chart. How can any thinking person witness animals with these abilities and characteristics and then ascribe it all to mindlessness? There has never been seen any random process that increases complexity. Ask Richard Dawkins.

  • @zeramino
    @zeramino 5 лет назад +1

    Really cool!

  • @RoleyChiu
    @RoleyChiu 5 лет назад +2

    This is why I no longer eat octopus and cuttlefish. All the dumb animals are still on the menu.

  • @skunk12
    @skunk12 5 лет назад

    3:19 what do you mean that this was "an unusual way to construct a nervous system in a body"?
    Was Samsung engineering team involved?

  • @danielhelmase2791
    @danielhelmase2791 5 лет назад +1

    CBS Sunday morning brought me here

  • @amirsultan1546
    @amirsultan1546 5 лет назад

    "Ancient, sapient, scintillating cephalopods, cephalopods
    Transdifferentiating
    cephalopods, cephalopods" - Alkaloid \m/

  • @kennyhill2678
    @kennyhill2678 4 года назад

    I've been thinking prevention of skin cancer , the way they can reflect light. Sun's getting hotter ever day

  • @Alexandra36968
    @Alexandra36968 4 месяца назад

    AMAZING

  • @Dionyzos
    @Dionyzos 5 лет назад +4

    Don't eat them, learn from them.

  • @bklue90
    @bklue90 4 года назад

    They will make a formidable foe in future wars to come..

  • @Goli_Vasq
    @Goli_Vasq 5 лет назад

    One of the top ones I’ve ever heard... I loved it.

  • @prettypointlessvideo
    @prettypointlessvideo 5 лет назад +1

    That's inkredible

  • @saturn724
    @saturn724 5 лет назад

    When it comes to biology, nothing is impossible. I imagine that somewhere in this universe there are some intelligent organisms that can communicate through telepathy, or have some other absurd natural abilities which we think are impossible.

  • @Ericdawg420
    @Ericdawg420 5 лет назад

    Aliens basically use octopus cloaking. Lmao

  • @lilbigman777
    @lilbigman777 4 года назад

    10:04
    "smart skin"

  • @luislorenti4510
    @luislorenti4510 5 лет назад

    Awesome!

  • @MrBollocks10
    @MrBollocks10 5 лет назад

    Amazed me what I find amazing

  • @classactracing
    @classactracing 5 лет назад +11

    Whats KRAKEN?
    Nothing you cant see me I'm camouflaged

    • @Trey4x4
      @Trey4x4 5 лет назад

      AHAHAHAHAHAFUCKINAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH

  • @jhonfamo8412
    @jhonfamo8412 5 лет назад

    I love this

  • @shivanand463
    @shivanand463 5 лет назад +1

    It's an amazing sir

  • @Greg042869
    @Greg042869 5 лет назад +4

    The split of courting/defensive signaling shows at the very least an us/them breakdown that leads to what we know as tribalism.

  • @BKaneNp8
    @BKaneNp8 5 лет назад

    Amazing

  • @timfondiggle2582
    @timfondiggle2582 5 лет назад

    Jesus these little guys are so cool, the way he just appears in that first clip reminds me of the Predator. Not to mention these dudes are pretty intelligent, at least they certainly seem to be, using tools and what not. They definantly seem smarter than like the average dog or cat, they seem closer to dolphins amd humans honestly. They live in such a different environment and life such different lives its hard to gauge theyre intelligence, conpared to ourselves anyway. There's real life aliens right here on earth, the oceans a crazy big, crazy cool, crazy spooky place thats certainly hiding all sorts or creaturea amd stuff we cant even imagine.

  • @mach1gtx150
    @mach1gtx150 5 лет назад +1

    The octopus seems to be so smart that one day it will be the dominate species on the planet.

    • @islamyEzaty
      @islamyEzaty 5 лет назад

      Dominant In your imagination

    • @dream1430
      @dream1430 5 лет назад

      Not while humans exist ...

    • @darthgandalf9485
      @darthgandalf9485 5 лет назад

      sadly its impossible for them to develop a society

    • @lexxeffectual
      @lexxeffectual 5 лет назад +3

      Problem is, they are unable to pass on knowledge to their children. But if I remember correctly, researchers found some octopuses who are starting to develop this ability. I hope, they succeed and we don't destroy their habitats before they get their chance. I love to imagine what a cephalopode society would look like. Hopefully they don't make them same mistakes we did...

    • @pohkeee
      @pohkeee 5 лет назад +1

      They just have to morph their skin into hands with opposable thumbs...they would survive many catastrophic events that would wipe out surface dwellers.

  • @zettaiahjussi1371
    @zettaiahjussi1371 5 лет назад

    The aliens in the movie Arrival were cephalopod-ish

  • @verticalpug2026
    @verticalpug2026 2 года назад

    CEPHALOPOD ACTIVITIES!!

  • @dylankars00
    @dylankars00 2 года назад

    and people don't think evil people are shapeshifting lizards

  • @rawdawgpendants5490
    @rawdawgpendants5490 5 лет назад

    Im sorry i couldnt hear you with my custom baby cuttle fish skin boors!!

  • @Jleigh225
    @Jleigh225 5 лет назад

    So they are like marvel super heros with camouflage

  • @wyattearp190
    @wyattearp190 5 лет назад +4

    I believe these animals are amazing and capable but have a very short life. This would limit their abilities.

    • @velkylev4217
      @velkylev4217 5 лет назад +1

      How long do they live ? Anyway, imagine if they lived as long as those tortoises

  • @invox9490
    @invox9490 5 лет назад

    No worries, I bet DARPA is working on that right now.

  • @thankyouforyourcompliance7386
    @thankyouforyourcompliance7386 5 лет назад +1

    Will the octopus be the next major animal after the human?

    • @lukenolan9798
      @lukenolan9798 5 лет назад

      Thank you for your compliance not if we kill it off, because we’re stupid like that

  • @shreder89
    @shreder89 5 лет назад +1

    this is total confirmation bias for me, cephalopods totally are aliens.

  • @moehrengruen1196
    @moehrengruen1196 5 лет назад

    One of the most interesting skinscells

  • @BrigidC123
    @BrigidC123 5 лет назад +2

    I now identify as an Octopus, if people say they can see me when I'm in Camouflage mode they are a bigot

    • @Mumbamumba
      @Mumbamumba 3 года назад

      I fully accept the fact that you are an octopus. As an octopus, what is your preferred pronoun?

  • @user-mq3ts7lr9l
    @user-mq3ts7lr9l 5 лет назад

    Wow!

  • @alokYadav-pv4wx
    @alokYadav-pv4wx 5 лет назад +2

    So fascinating...😙😙may be there is mermaid type creature too who is advancrd version of octopus.....and live beyond the reach of humans