Under Construction

Octopodoidea Orbigny, 1839

Octopods, octopuses, devilfishes

Mark D. Norman, F. G. Hochberg, Christine Huffard, and Katharina M. Mangold (1922-2003)
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This family is made up of the familiar bottom-living octopuses and contains the majority of the genera and species which make up the Order Incirrata. The taxonomy of the family is poor with more than 30 genera coined, of which the following 24 are generally accepted as valid. There are over 200 species worldwide with the majority lacking detailed descriptions.
taxon links [up-->]Amphitretidae [up-->]Ameloctopus [up-->]Pareledone [down<--]Incirrata Interpreting the tree
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Editorial note: This page was written prior to the recent paper by Strugnell, et al. (2013) which restructured the classification to the form seen above. Previously the above taxa, with the exception of the Amphitretidae were included within the family Octopodidae.
Containing group: Incirrata

Introduction

Members of this family are the best known of the octopods. There is considerable diversity within this family. They range in size from pygmy species mature at under one gram (e.g., Octopus wolfi) to the Giant Pacific Octopus (Octopus dofleini) of the North Pacific reaching weights in excess of 150 kilograms with an arm span of over 5 m. All are muscular with one or two rows of suckers. Body proportions vary between species, from animals with arms approximately twice the mantle length (as in the blue-ringed octopuses, genus Hapalochlaena) to those with arms up to 10 times the mantle length (as in Ameloctopus) (see title photos above). The skin also varies between species from smooth (as in Benthoctopus - left photograph below) to highly sculptured (as in Octopus cyanea - right photograph) below.

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Benthoctopus levis (left) from Heard Island, Indian Ocean (photograph copyright © 1996, T. Stranks); Octopus cyanea (right) from the Great Barrier Reef (photograph copyright © 1996, Mark Norman).

Characteristics

  1. Suckers in one or two series.
  2. One of the third arms modified in males (= hectocotylus), as an open sperm groove (running along ventral edge of the arm) to subterminal tip (calamus) and a modified terminal tip (ligula), typically spoon-like.
  3. Hectocotylus not detachable.
  4. Beaks: Descriptions can be found here: Lower beak; upper beak.
  5. Internal shell reduced to a pair of stylets or lost.
  6. Stomach and caecum posterior to digestive gland.
  7. Lateral radula teeth (if present) simple, with single cusp.

Discussion of Phylogenetic Relationships

There has been little research into the phylogeny of this family as the morphology of the majority of genera and species are yet to be described in detail. Molecular analyses presently are rudimentary. Earlier works have recognised up to four subfamilies on the basis of relatively few characters, particularly the number of sucker rows and the presence or absence of an ink sac and a diverticulum branch off the crop (see Voss, 1988). These subfamilies are Octopodinae (double sucker row, ink sac and crop diverticulum present), Eledoninae (single sucker row, ink sac and crop diverticulum present), Bathypolypodinae (double sucker row, ink sac absent), Graneledoninae (single sucker row, ink sac and crop diverticulum absent). The latter two subfamilies are restricted to deeper waters and Voss (1988) discusses possible adaptations of these groups to lightless depths. The validity of these groupings have not been firmly established and there is a high likelihood of convergence in these few characters. The most detailed treatments of this family are provided in Naef (1923), Sasaki (1929), Robson (1929) and Nesis (1982).

Life history

Members of this family mate by the male transferring sperm packages (spermatophores) to the female using the modified third arm (hectocotylus). Spermatophores are shunted along an open groove on the hectocotylised arm to a spoon-shaped tip (ligula). The male places the spermatophores within the oviducts of the female. Females can store sperm for up to 10 months (Mangold, in Boyle, 1983), and in many species immature females can mate and store viable sperm until mature. The elongate spermatophores evert within the oviduct to form a sperm bulb (spermatangia). In certain species, the everting spermatophore is covered in sharp teeth which aid the penetration of the sperm bulb along the oviduct through the oviducal glands and into the body of the ovary. In most species, sperm is stored within or adjacent to the oviducal glands. Fertilization typically occurs as the eggs pass through the oviducal glands.

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Spermatophore groove of Abdopus aculeatus, arrow points to spermatophore guide that may direct the spermatophores as they are expelled from the funnel. Note coiled tip of this mating arm, perhaps to protect the ligula.  © 2005 .  Ligula of Octopus humilis from Tonga. © 1997 . Diagram of the female reproductive tract (Abdopus aculeatus) during copulation.  Arrow 1 points to the spermatophore groove of the inserted hectocotylus.  Arrow 2 points an oviducal gland, photo © 2005

Hatchling paralarva of Octopus cyanea, off Hawaii. © 1996, Richard Young.

Crawl-away hatchling of the large-egged Octopus cf. mercatoris. © 2006

Egg size varies between different species and falls into two broad categories, according to Boletzky (1977): "Large-egg" species produce eggs greater than 10% of the mantle length (as few as 50, up to 30 mm long), and "small-egg" species produce many small eggs less than 10% of mantle length (up to 600,000, as small as 1.5 mm each). Hatchlings of most large-egg species are well-developed and adopt a benthic habit on hatching, although this generalization does not hold for some pygmy species such as O. bocki. These young typically possess arms with many suckers and adult-like skin sculpture and colour patterns.

The hatchlings of the "small-egg" species live in the plankton in their early stages and are characterized by short arms with few suckers and simple colour patterns consisting of a few large "founder" chromatophores (Packard, 1985). The morphology of these planktonic stages changes rapidly on settlement, quickly transforming to resemble the adult.

The females of all species within this family brood, remaining with the eggs until hatching, cleaning the eggs by jetting water through them as they develop. Females typically cease feeding prior to spawning and establish themselves within the safety of a lair. Eggs are typically laid in strings or festoons, where the egg stalks are interwoven or glued together. Most species attach the eggs to the substrate, shells or man-made objects. Females of several species in the genera Hapalochlaena and Amphioctopus carry the egg strings on their arms, enveloping them within the webs. The duration of development of the embryos is longer at low temperatures than at high ones, and is longer in large eggs than in small ones. Octopus vulgaris eggs (2.0 mm) develop in 30 days at 20 C and in 65 days at 15 C. The large eggs of Bathypolypus arcticus (i.e., 15 mm) need one year to develop (O'Dor and Macalaster, in Boyle, 1983).


Female Abdopus abaculus brooding eggs.
© 2000

Spawning is terminal in the majority of octopodid species, i.e., females die shortly after the last embryos have hatched. In other species, e.g., Octopus chierchiae, spawning is intermittent, where females resume feeding after the embryos hatch, and grow until the next spawning takes place (Rodaniche, 1984) although the ovaries do not regress and regrow between spawning episodes.  At the end of their life span, octopuses tend to lose mass, coordination, and the ability to express complex body patterns (see brooding female Abdopus abaculus below).

Members of this family prey on a wide range of animals, although primarily crustaceans (movie iconView Abdopus foraging). Certain species appear to be generalists (one individual of Octopus dierythraeus was caught carrying crabs, a bivalve shell, a fish, a polychaete worm and a freshly decapitated octopus; Norman, 1993a), while others concentrate on a single group. Octopus alpheus has a diet apparently restricted to crabs (Norman, 1993). Certain species use the radula to drill bivalve or gastropod shells (e.g., Nixon and Maconnachie, 1988). Octopus ornatus preys heavily on octopuses of other species (Norman, 1993b). Cannibalism has also been reported for many species.

As in all cephalopods, octopuses are fast growing. At hatching, Octopus vulgaris juveniles weigh 2 mg, growing to weights of 2 to 3 kg in 12 to 18 months (Mangold, in Boyle, 1983). Paralarvae of this species feed on planktonic crustaceans, whereas the newly settled young feed mostly on benthic prey. The conversion rate of young Octopus vulgaris is 50% when fed crustaceans. The life-span of members of the Octopodidae varies between about 6 months in small tropical species to four years in cold water species such as Bathypolypus arcticus (O'Dor and Macalaster, in Boyle, 1983).

Behaviour

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Hapalochlaena maculosa, jetting, from Victoria, southern Australia © 1996 M. Norman

Octopodids primarily move by crawling over the substrate (movie iconView Abdopus aculeatus crawling in situ). They are also capable of swimming via two methods:

  1. jet propulsion using the funnel (as seen in the photograph of Hapalochlaena maculosa), or
  2. by pumping the arms and flared webs (movie iconView Abdopus medusoid swimming).

In addition to using these modes, two octopuses (Amphioctopus marginatus and Abdopus aculeatus) are known to walk bipedally (movie iconView Abdopus aculeatus walking).

 

Abdopus aculeatus close up showing chromatophores and skin papillae. © 2005

Octopus bocki © 1996

Many shallow-water species exhibit a remarkable match to the color and texture of the background (in spite of the fact that they are color blind!). This camouflage is produced by chromatophore combinations, passive reflection from specialized cells (iridophores, leucophores) and sculpture formed by raised (even branched) muscular patches and papillae (see image below).  Variation in skin anatomies leads to a wide range of species-specific body patterns and skin textures.  For example, body patterns in Octopus bocki appear limited to fairly uniform purple with iridescent patches on the mantle and around the eyes, while Octopus cyanea can display numerous patterns using differently colored chromatophores.

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Camouflaged undescribed member of Octopus horridus group, Great Barrier Reef, © 1996 M. Norman

For many species, activity is restricted to specific periods. Many species are only active at night (e.g., Octopus ornatus), while others are predominantly day active (e.g., Octopus cyanea), see Houck (1982). Certain species are further restricted in their activity periods to the duration of low tides, only emerging to forage in rock pools on exposed intertidal reefs.

Octopuses of this family seek shelter in a number of ways. Many species utilize or construct holes as temporary or semi-permanent lairs, often recognised by prey remains or small piles of pebbles surrounding the entrance. These lairs may occur in corals, rock and rubble or can be excavated in sand or mud sediments.  Many night-active species such as O. ornatus simply excavate a hole anywhere amongst rubble in the substrate at the end of a night's foraging, covering themselves with rubble or sand during the day. Other species which occur on open sand substrates (such as O. kaurna) simply bury in open sand. Certain species such as O. berrima (photograph below) possess a ridge-like keel around the lateral mantle which may aid in guiding the animal below the sand. This species frequently buries below the sand, occasionally raising a single eye like a periscope to scan. In some species (such as O. bimaculoides) larger individuals outcompete smaller individuals for preferred shelters.  True territoriality however has not been shown in octopuses.  

Defenses in this group range from camouflage (as seen in the photograph below), to ink dummy decoys, to ink smoke screens (see image below of ink from O. cyanea), to arm-dropping (as in Ameloctopus) and production of strong toxins advertised by distinctive colour patterns (as in Hapalochlaena). Alarm displays in certain species have been supplemented by a pair of false-eye spots, one on the lateral arm crown below each eye. These ocellate octopuses flare the webs and display these spots to produce the appearance of the head of a large predator (e.g., photograph below of Octopus mototi, Norman, 1993b).  Some sand-dwelling octopuses (such as Thaumoctopus mimicus) can escape threatening sitations by burying into the sand and emerging more than one meter away.

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Octopus berrima, from Victoria, southern Australia , © 1996 S. Foale. Ink smokescreen of Octopus cyanea, from Palmyra Atoll. © 2006 .  Ocellated octopus Octopus mototi, from the Great Barrier Reef © 1996 M. Norman. 

Distribution

Members of this family are found in marine habitats ranging from intertidal reefs to the deep sea (to at least 5000 m). They live in all oceans of the world from the equator to polar latitudes, and occupy a wide range of habitats from coral and rocky reefs, seagrass and algal beds, to sand and mud soft substrates. The group is represented by possible habitat generalists (such as the large Enteroctopus dofleini which ranges from the intertidal to depths in excess of 450 m) and specialists (such as Vulcanoctopus hydrothermalis which is found only in hydrothermal vents). Some octopodids appear to space themselves far apart from each other, while others clump in available habitat.  We do not currently know if these distributions reflect ecological preferences or the outcomes of inter/intra-specific competition.  Although some species occupy a den and forage in the vicinity for weeks or longer, species studied thus far do not appear to be territorial and defend their home range from conspecifics.

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Callistoctopus ornatus foraging in less than 10 cm of water, less than one meter from the beach. Rurutu, Austral Islands © 2006 Christine Huffard; Octopus cyanea on an intertidal reef, Rurutu, Austral Islands. © 2006 Christine Huffard; Undescribed octopus foraging on sand plains in North Sulawesi, Indonesia; 15 m deep © 2006 Christine Huffard; Graneledone boreopacifica Davidson Seamount; 1973 m deep. © 2002 NOAA/MBARI.

Key to Genera of the Family Octopodidae

The following key treats clearly defined or named genera within the family Octopodidae. The generic placement of many taxa within this family remain unresolved and are thus not covered by this key. These taxa are treated below under the general category “unplaced Octopus”. Genera designated with an asterisk (*) are in urgent need of revision.

Notes for key:

Male diagnostic characters: As for many other cephalopod groups, octopus taxonomy relies heavily on the reproductive charactersof mature males, particularly structures of the modified reproductive arm (hectocotylised arm). Female material is harder to identify.

Arm lengths: Use of relative arm lengths requires intact arms. A sudden change in sucker diameter at any point along an arm is an indicator of partial arm regeneration. Such arms should not be considered in assessing relative arm lengths.

1a         Suckers in single row or as slight zigzag in live animals or contracted specimens…………………2

1b.        Suckers clearly in two rows on all arms …………………………………………………….. 13

2a.        Ink sac present………………………………………………………………………………… 3

2b.        Ink sac absent………………………………………………………………………………… 10

3a.        Webs greatly enlarged at distal ends to forms wing-like vanes (single species restricted to western Indian Ocean)…...………………………………………………Velodona Chun, 1915

3b.        Web margins absent or as narrow bands to arms tips, not expanded in distal portion……...… 4

4a.        Mature males with suckers highly modified on tips of normal arms, as ridges, stellate suckers, frills of papillae or spongiform tissue; some member taxa with hectocotylised arm tip that lacks a distinct ligula and/or calamus………………………………….…………………….... 5

4b.        Mature males with distinct ligula and calamus; normal arm tips of mature males without obvious sucker modifications ……………………………………………………………...…. 6

5a.            Hectocotylised arm tip of mature male fleshy and convoluted in the form of a walnut, no obvious calamus; distal suckers of normal arms of mature males modified into a fringe of long thin papillae (single species restricted to southern Africa)……………………………………… …………………………………………...Aphrodoctopus Roper and Mangold, 1992

5b.            Hectocotylised arm tip as normal ligula and calamus or may lack calamus; distal suckers of normal arms of mature males modified as regular ridges or as spongiform tissue… …….. …………………………………………………………………………..Eledone Leach, 1817*

6a.        Radula normal with seven rows of teeth plus marginal plates……………………………… 7

6b.        Radula reduced to a single row of highly modified teeth with vane-like lateral wings (single species restricted to west and south-west Atlantic Ocean)………Vosseledone Palacio, 1978

7a.        Funnel organ as W, UU or VV-shaped pads; skin smooth or sculptured ………………….. 8

7b.        Funnel organ as four distinct short longitudinal pads (IIII); all dorsal and lateral surfaces covered in large branched papillae (single species restricted to central western Atlantic Ocean)……………………………..……………………………Tetracheledone Voss, 1955

8a.        Small to moderate species, never attaining large sizes; head width close to or greater than mantle width; gills with 6-11 lamellae per demibranch……………………………………. 9

8b.        Large (up to 14kg) species with loose soft gelatinous skin; head distinctly narrower than mantle; gills with 10-11 lamellae per demibranch (single species restricted to Antarctic waters) ……………………………………………..…………… Megaleledone Taki, 1961

9a.        Ligula grove without transverse ridges; lower beak without sharp modified tip, rostrum curved downwards in lateral profile; posterior salivary glands approximately equal in length with buccal mass; stylets present ……………………………………… Pareledone Robson, 1932

9b.        Ligula grove with distinct transverse ridges; lower beak with sharp modified tip, rostrum straight or slightly upturned in lateral profile; posterior salivary glands approximately twice length of buccal mass; stylets absent …………………........................................................ …………………………….Adelieledone Allcock, Hochberg, Rodhouse and Thorpe, 2003

10a.      Skin beset with raised conical or composite papillae hardened with cartilaginous inclusions (less obvious in frozen material)………………………………… Graneledone Joubin, 1918

10b.      Skin lacks hardened papillae, sculpture soft or skin completely smooth…………………. 11

11a.      Arms short, less than 2 times mantle length; posterior salivary glands large, more than half buccal mass length………………………………………………………………………… 12

11b.      Arms of moderate length, approximately 2-3 times mantle length; posterior salivary glands small, significantly less than half buccal mass length …………Bentheledone Robson, 1932*

12a.      Radula reduced to three to five rows of teeth; skin covered in low regular rounded papillae ………………………………………………………………..Thaumeledone Robson, 1930*

12b.      Radula complete with 7 rows of teeth, lateral teeth flattened into broad plates; skin smooth (single species known only from Tasman Sea)……………………………………………….. ……………………………..Microeledone Norman, Hochberg and Boucher-Rodoni, 2004

13a.      Small octopuses with repeated colour pattern of iridescent blue lines or rings over body, arms and webs (markings fade to white in preserved material)…… Hapalochlaena Robson, 1929

13b.      Small to large octopuses without repeated iridescent markings over body, arms and webs (some species possess a pair of iridescent rings, one on each side of the web between the bases of arms 2 and 3)……………………………………………………………………………… 14

14a.      Ink sac present……………………………………………………………………………….. 15

14b.      Ink sac absent……………………………………………………………………………….... 22

15a.      Arm autotomy present, evident as multiple arms severed or regenerating from set level near to arm base (restricted to long-armed species, arms typically >4 times mantle length)….……. 16

15b.      Arm damage and regeneration not at set plane on arm (long and short-armed species)….… 17

16a.      Third or fourth arm pair longest; large crescent-shaped markings on mantle absent; fields of enlarged suckers present on arms 2 and 3 of mature males (Indo West Pacific only) …...….....…………………...…............................................Abdopus Norman and Finn, 2001

16b.      Second arm pair longest; large crescent markings present on dorso-lateral posterior mantle; enlarged suckers absent (restricted to Central Americas only)………Euaxoctopus Voss, 1971

17a.      Dorsal arms distinctly longer than remaining arms, arm formula 1>2>3>4 ………………... 16

17b.      Arms approximately equal in length or lateral arms longest ………………………………... 17

16a       Series of water pores on oral web in ring around mouth, small muscular pore of each pouch opening to exterior around level of 3rd-6th proximal suckers; ligula tiny in mature males, calamus barely visible……………………………………………………Cistopus Gray, 1849

16b.      Water pouches and pores absent; ligula well-developed in mature males………………..…… ……………………………………………………………………….Callistoctopus Taki, 1964

17a.      Ligula with transverse ligula groove containing small teeth-like lugs; raised skin ridge present on lateral mantle [single deepwater species (200-400 m) in western Pacific]…………………. …………………………………………Galeoctopus Norman, Boucher and Hochberg, 2004

17b.      Ligula groove longitudinal, without teeth-like lugs; lateral mantle ridge present or absent ... 18

18a.      Left third arm of males hectocotylised…………………………………………….………….19

18b.      Right third arm of males hectocotylised …………………………………………………..… 20

19a.      Mantle opening narrow, one third or less of body circumference, fitting close to funnel; paired narrow papillae over each eye; skin ridge absent from lateral mantle; body markings absent ………………………………………………………………….…Pteroctopus Fischer, 1882*

19b.      Mantle opening moderate to wide, approximately one half of body circumference; single large papilla over each eye; lateral mantle skin ridge present; two pairs of dark spots visible on mantle of live and well-preserved material………………………. Scaeurgus Troschel, 1857

20a.      Giant species (to >4m total length); skin on mantle in loose longitudinal folds; ligula very long to accommodate giant spermatophores (up to 1 m long)……………………………………….. ……..………………………………………....Enteroctopus Rochebrune and Mabille, 1889

20b.      Small to large species; skin typically with regular or irregular patch and groove sculpture of raised patches or papillae (not in loose longitudinal folds); spermatophores small to moderate, never giant…………………………………………………………………………………… 21

21a.      Arms typically 2-3 times mantle length; skin sculpture of dorsal mantle head and webs continues on to oral surface of shallow dorsal web; colour patterns often incorporate dark leading edges along dorso-lateral face of arms 1-3; four short longitudinal ridges of skin in diamond arrangement on dorsal mantle; stylets absent ………... Amphioctopus Fisher, 1882 

21b.      Arms typically 3-5 times mantle length; sculpture on oral surface of dorsal web not a continuation of mantle and aboral web sculpture; colour patterns of dark leading arm edges absent; four large primary papillae in diamond arrangement on dorsal mantle, stylets present………………………………………………….. Octopus sensu strictu Cuvier, 1797*

22a.      Arms extremely long, more than 6 times mantle length; arms with banded brown and white colour pattern …………………………………………………….Ameloctopus Norman, 1992

22b.      Arms short to moderate in length, less than 6 times mantle length; arms not banded ……... 23

23a.      Skin white, lacking any pigmentation; iris of eye absent; eyes small (single species from hydrothermal vents)……………………………. Vulcanoctopus Gonzalez and Guerra, 1998

23b.      Skin with at least some pigmentation (ie oral webs, ventral and/or dorsal surfaces); iris present; eyes moderate to large ……..……………………………………………………… 24

24a.      Calamus of mature males very large, over half ligula length (single species, southern Australia) ..................................................................................…… Grimpella Robson, 1928*

24b.      Calamus small to moderate, much less than half ligula length……………………………… 25

25a.      Ligula of mature males large and spoon-shaped, deeply excavated with a number of well-defined transverse ridges (laminae)……………………………  Bathypolypus Grimpe, 1921

25b.      Ligula moderate to large, elongate, typically with closed ligula groove; raised laminae absent ………………………………………………………………….Benthoctopus Grimpe, 1921*

Other Names for Octopodoidea Orbigny, 1839

References

Boletzky, S. von. 1977. Post-hatching behaviour and mode of life in cephalopods. Pp. 557-567. In: M. Nixon and J.B. Messenger (eds). The Biology of Cephalopods. Symposia of the Biological Society of London, Volume 38.

Boyle, P. R. (ed.). 1983. Cephalopod Life Cycles. Vol. II. Species Accounts. Academic Press, N. Y.

Hanlon, R. and J.B. Messenger. 1996. Cephalopod Behaviour. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. 232 pp.

Houck, B.A. 1982. Temporal spacing in the activity patterns of three Hawaiian shallow water octopods. Nautilus, 96(4): 152-156.

Naef, A. 1923. Die Cephalopoden. Fauna e flora del Golfo di Napoli, 35: (I-1) V-XIV, 1-863. English translation (1972), Israel Program for Scientific Translations, Jerusalem. 292 pp.

Nesis, K. 1982. Cephalopods of the World (in Russian). English translation (1987) by B.S. Levitov. T.F.H. Publication, Neptune City, New Jersey, 351 pp.

Nixon, M. and E. Maconnachie. 1988. Drilling by Octopus vulgaris (Mollusca, Cephalopoda) in the Mediterranean. Jour. Zool. Lond., 216: 587-716.

Norman, M.D. 1992. Ameloctopus litoralis gen. & sp. nov. (Cephalopoda: Octopodidae), a new shallow-water octopus from tropical Australian waters. Invertebrate Taxonomy, 6: 567-582

Norman, M.D. 1993a. Four new species of the Octopus macropus group (Cephalopoda: Octopodidae) from the Great Barrier Reef Australia. Memoirs of the Museum of Victoria (1992), 53(2): 267-308.

Norman, M.D. 1993b. Ocellate octopuses (Cephalopoda: Octopodidae) of the Great Barrier Reef, Australia: description of two new species and redescription of Octopus polyzenia Gray, 1849. Memoirs of Museum of Victoria (1992), 53(2): 309-344.

Norman, M.D. 1993c. Octopus ornatus Gould, 1852 (Cephalopoda: Octopodidae) in Australian waters: morphology, distribution and life history. Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington, 106(4): 645-660.

Packard, A. 1985. Sizes and distribution of chromatophores during post-embryonic development in cephalopoda. Vie Milieu, 35: 285-298.

Robson, G. C. 1929. A monograph of the Recent Cephalopoda. Part I. Octopodinae. British Museum (Natural History), London. 250pp.

Robson, G. C. 1931. A monograph of the Recent Cephalopoda. Part II. The Octopoda (excluding the Octopodinae). British Museum (Natural History), London. 359 pp.

Rodaniche, A.F. 1984. Iteroparity in the Lesser Pacific Striped Octopus, Octopus chierchiae (Jatta, 1889). Bulletin of Marine Science, 35(1): 99-104.

Sasaki, M. 1929. A monograph of the dibranchiate cephalopods of the Japanese and adjacent waters. Journal of the Faculty of Agriculture, Hokkaido Imperial University, vol. 20 suppl. 357 pp.

Sweeney, M. J. and C. F. E. Roper 1998. Classification, type localities and type repositories of Recent Cephalopoda. Smithsonian Contributions to Zoology, No. 513: 561-599.

Voss, G.L. 1988. Evolution and phylogenetic relationships of deep-sea octopods (Cirrata and Incirrata). Pp. 253-276. In: Clarke, M.R. and E.R. Trueman (eds). The Mollusca, Vol. 12. Palaeontology and neontology of cephalopods. Academic Press, London.

Information on the Internet

How octopus suckers work. Pharyngula.
Title Illustrations
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Scientific Name Hapalochlaena maculosa
Location Victoria, southern Australia
Copyright © 1996 D. Paul
Scientific Name Ameloctopus litoralis
Location Darwin, northern Australia
Specimen Condition Live Specimen
Copyright © 1996
About This Page

Christine Huffard has contributed to the Life History, Behaviour and Distribution sections of this page.


University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria, Australia

F. G. Hochberg
Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History, Santa Barbara, California, USA


Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute

Katharina M. Mangold (1922-2003)
Laboratoire Arago, Banyuls-Sur-Mer, France

All Rights Reserved.

Citing this page:

Norman, Mark D., F. G. Hochberg, Christine Huffard, and Katharina M. Mangold (1922-2003). 2016. Octopodoidea Orbigny, 1839. Octopods, octopuses, devilfishes. Version 16 November 2016 (under construction). http://tolweb.org/Octopodoidea/20194/2016.11.16 in The Tree of Life Web Project, http://tolweb.org/

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