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B1 中級 英語 21:27 Educational

The Insane Biology of: The Octopus

Real Science · 14,874,364 回視聴 · 追加日 3週間前

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字幕 (241 セグメント)

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In many ways, the octopus is as close to alien life as we may ever see. Few creatures in

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the world are as remarkable and bizarre. A part of a class of animals called cephalopods,

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they are among the most intelligent and most mobile of all the invertebrates. They live

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in every ocean in the world, in the deep sea, in kelp forests, in coral reefs, along rocky

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shorelines. And they are as diverse as the habitats they live in. They can be massive,

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or absolutely tiny. Some species are venomous, and some are just downright strange. In any

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given moment, they can appear spikey, or they can appear smooth. They are so different from

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us, that most of their 500 million neurons are not in their brain, but in their arms,

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which can smell and taste, and even think. And so intelligent that their cognitive ability

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matches that of many large-brained vertebrates.

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They have left scientists stunned about how a creature so far from us on the evolutionary

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tree could evolve such complex behaviors, their intelligence emerging in an entirely

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novel and independent way from our own.

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So how did the octopus become so biologically complicated - an island of complexity in the

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sea of invertebrate animals? Just how intelligent are they, and how can studying them reveal

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information about our own minds?

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Cephalopods have been around for a long time. Fossil records show that they evolved over

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500 million years ago - long before any fish, reptiles, or mammals appeared on earth. The

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early ancestor of the octopus was quite small and had a shell, which it used to protect

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itself as it crawled along the ocean bottom. Cephalopods are, after all, members of the

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mollusk phylum. A group of creatures that are usually slow and simple, with soft bodies

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and a hard protective shell - like snails, clams, and oysters. But around 140 million

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years ago, the lineage that produced the octopus lost their shells, making them nimble, agile

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creatures, but in the process also made them rather vulnerable. Survival of these soft

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bodied creatures for so many millions of years therefore seems unlikely in a sea full of

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dangerous, hungry predators. But this vulnerability and selective pressure may be precisely what

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has allowed the octopus to become the remarkable creature we know today.

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Because an octopus has almost no hard parts at all, except its beak, it can squeeze through

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any hole as long as it’s larger than its eyeball. This allows the octopus to hide in

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very small crevices - a certain evolutionary advantage when escaping large predators like

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sharks or dolphins. But, the soft-bodied octopus evolved an even more clever way of evading

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detection: they are masters of disguise.

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Watching this clip of an octopus, you can see just how quickly and drastically it can

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change colors. In slow motion reverse, you see the color change spread across its body.

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The 3D texture of the skin also changes, to match the surrounding seaweed and coral. In

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the blink of an eye, it has almost completely blended in with its surroundings. Cephalopod

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camouflage is among the most dynamic in the animal kingdom, and relies on a system of

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extremely sophisticated tissues.

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Chromatophores are organs that are speckled across the skin of the octopus, like freckles.

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They contain tiny pigment filled sacs, like little balloons full of different color dye,

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which can be black, red or yellow. The pigment sacs are surrounded by radial muscles, which

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can stretch the sac to reveal the pigment’s color. Just like balloons full of dye, when

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stretched, their pigment color appears bright and vibrant. Depending on which sets of sacs

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an octopus opens or closes, it can produce patterns such as bands, stripes, or spots

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- helping to turn itself into a rock, a coral, or kelp in an instant.

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But if the octopus needs to produce colors outside of black, red, and yellow, it uses

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another layer of reflective structures in their skin called iridophores. They are stacks

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of very thin cells that lay beneath the chromatophores. They contain a protein called reflectin that

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bounces certain wavelengths of light back out. They are responsible for the metallic

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