Giant Pacific octopus
Giant Pacific octopus
The giant Pacific octopus grows bigger and lives longer than any other species of poultry. A specimen which was 30 feet long and weighed more than 600 pounds holds the size record. Averages more than 16 feet and 110 lbs. Giant Pacific octopuses have large, bulbous heads, and are typically coloured reddish-brown. Nevertheless, like the other members of the octopus family, they use different pigment cells in their skin to change colours and textures, so they can blend in with even the most intricately patterned corals, plants, so rocks.

They live to be about four years old, with males and females soon dying after birth. Females live long enough to tend their eggs fastidiously, but during this month-long time of brooding they do not feed, and typically die soon after. Giant Pacific octopuses, highly intelligent creatures have learned to open bottles, imitate other octopuses and solve labyrinths in laboratory experiments. Its population figures are uncertain, and do not appear on any lists of endangered or threatened species at present. They are nevertheless vulnerable to environmental factors and may suffer from high levels of pollution in their range.

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