Author:
Anderson T. J.,Leigh R. C. Babcock
Abstract
Electromagnetic tags were subcutaneously implanted in the dorsal crown of 28
octopus (20 aquarium tagged; and 8 wild octopus tagged
in situ) from two species:
Octopus tetricus and O. maorum.
Laboratory tagged octopus retained tags for the duration of the study (14
months), as did octopus tagged in the wild (13 weeks). No signs of lesions,
physical deterioration, or abnormal behaviours were apparent in either
laboratory or field tagged octopus. Tagging had no significant effect on
growth trajectories. Both laboratory and field tagged octopus appeared
healthy, physically vigorous, maintained voracious apetites, and regularly
stalked and attacked vigorous prey (laboratory observations only).
Subcutaneously implanted electromagnetic tags enabled individuals to be
tagged, and tags to be read in situ with minimal
disturbance to the animal. Electromagnetic tagging is a potentially invaluable
tool in studying benthic octopus and may have similar value in the study of
many cephalopods and other soft bodied organisms.
Subject
Ecology,Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Oceanography
Cited by
15 articles.
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