Underwater Photography by Jay Torborg |
"Hawaiian Day Octopus #3" |
The Hawaiian Day Octopus (Octopus cyanea)
is the most common octopus in Hawaii. A member of the same phylum as the
clam (Mollusca), octopuses are noted for their remarkable intelligence,
their ability to change color instantly, the cloud of ink they release
to cover their exit, and their ability to compress themselves through
tiny cracks. Octopuses mate by transfer sperm using a special arm (its hectocotylus
arm) to insert the sperm into the female�s mantle cavity. After
the females lay their eggs, the females of many octopus species then
guard them until they hatch. In most species, the octopus mates once,
when about a year old, then dies.
Photographed in about 35ft of water off the Kohala Coast of the Big Island in Hawaii, near the Mauna Lani resort. Photographed with a Nikon N90s in a Sea&Sea NX90 housing with two Ikelite 200 strobes. Nikon 60mm f2.8 macro lens. Fuji Provia 100F transparency film scanned with a Nikon LS-2000. |
Copyright Jay Torborg 2000, 2001 |