Mysterious Morphology: An Investigation of the Octopus Keel and Its Association with Burrowing

Author:

Springbett Cheyne1ORCID,Cordero Katie1,Ellis Garrett1,Haeger Carly1,Onthank Kirt L.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biological Sciences, Walla Walla University, College Place, WA 99324, USA

Abstract

The octopus keel is a trait that has been hypothesized to be connected with burrowing in octopuses, but has never been explored in any detail. We investigated the association between these two traits using two approaches. First, we examined the phylogenetic correlation between the presence of a keel and known burrowing behavior in cirrate octopuses. Second, burrowing and non-burrowing captive Muusoctopus leioderma were evaluated for keel prominence to determine whether the keel is lost more rapidly in non-burrowing individuals. Pagel’s test for the coevolution of binary characteristics showed the model of best fit for the resulting phylogenetic tree to be one of evolutionary interdependence, and that non-burrowing Muusoctopus leioderma lost their keels over time, while burrowing individuals maintained their keels. Together, these results indicate the keel may be a trait associated with burrowing in octopuses.

Funder

Walla Walla University

American Academy of Underwater Sciences

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

Reference31 articles.

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