Today, we celebrate a creature with three hearts and the uncanny ability to change color at will: the octopus. Octopuses are cephalopods, marine animals like squids and cuttlefish that have tentacles. Among their many species is the small and shy mototi octopus, pictured here. It was discovered in 1999 around Rapa Island in the South Pacific and is known for the "fake eyes" or ocelli—vibrant blue and yellow rings—between its eyes and arms. Found in the Indo-Pacific region, including Indonesia, Australia, and Okinawa in Japan, mototi octopuses are masters of disguise. They usually have a dull orange-cream-brown color but when alarmed, they can quickly shift to striking maroon with white stripes along their body and arms. Also known as poison ocellate octopuses, these cephalopods are highly venomous. But you don"t need to worry about running into one, because they tend to be shy and solitary, often hiding in crevices, shells, or man-made objects like bottles and cans.
World Octopus Day
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
World Water Day
-
The Great Blue Hole, Belize
-
Racing toward history
-
Kjell Henriksen Observatory
-
North Sea at sunset, Norddorf, Germany
-
Flowers by the sea
-
European Day of Parks
-
Bonifacio on the island of Corsica, France
-
The Guggenheim turns 60
-
Flocking together in the Antarctic
-
Computer Science Education Week
-
The meeting point of the winds
-
European fallow deer in England
-
Light show at the skatepark
-
Celebrating Madagascar on its Independence Day
-
Festivus
-
International Dark Sky Week
-
Happy Fathers Day!
-
Making it work—in Norway
-
Sonoma Coast State Park, California
-
Bridge of Hillsborough County
-
Mount Hood, Oregon
-
Palace of Westminster, London, England
-
Mediterranean red sea stars
-
Ministry of Fun Santa School
-
Ring of fire solar eclipse
-
Presidents Day
-
A theatrical dream
-
Mekong River Delta, Long An, Vietnam
-
Rapa Valley in Sarek National Park, Sweden
Bing Wallpaper Gallery


