Behavior and Ecology

Intelligence

octopus holding a clear jar
Octopus holding a Jar [1]

Octopuses demonstrate high intelligence and, through various experiments including maze and problem-solving, show evidence that they're capable of storing short and long-term information. Octopuses have also been observed to engage in behavior that may indicate sentience, such as: [1]

Feeding

Octopus feeding on a crab
Veined octopus with crab [2]

Nearly all octopuses are predatory; bottom-dwelling octopuses eat mainly crustaceans, polychaete worms, and other molluscs such as whelks and clams; open-ocean octopuses eat mainly prawns, fish and other cephalopods. A benthic (bottom-dwelling) octopus typically moves among the rocks and feels through the crevices. The creature may make a jet-propelled pounce on prey and pull it toward the mouth with its arms, the suckers restraining it. Small prey may be completely trapped by the webbed structure. Octopuses usually inject crustaceans like crabs with a paralysing saliva then dismember them with their beaks. Octopuses feed on shelled molluscs either by forcing the valves apart, or by drilling a hole in the shell to inject a nerve toxin. [1]

Lifespan

octopus protecting their eggs
Jeju Octopus with its eggs [3]

Octopuses have short lifespans, with some species' lifespans completed in only six months. The lifespan of an octopus is limited by its reproductive cycle, with the exception of the larger Pacific striped octopus, which can reproduce numerous times over its two-year lifespan. In the last stage of an octopus's life, an octopus forms lesions, quickly weakens, does not feed and is unable to defend themselves leaving them vunerable. This last stage is called Senescence, it is the the breakdown of cellular function without repair or replacement. [1]

The Senescence timeline for Female and Male Octopus differs: