Blue-ringed octopuses, comprising the genus Hapalochlaena, are four extremely venomous species of octopus that are found in tide pools and coral reefs in the Pacific and Indian Oceans, from Japan to Australia. They can be identified by their yellowish skin and characteristic blue and black rings that can change color dramatically when the animals are threatened. They eat small crustaceans, including crabs, hermit crabs, shrimp, and other small sea animals.

They are some of the world’s most venomous marine animals. Despite their small size—12 to 20 cm (5 to 8 in)—and relatively docile nature, they are very dangerous if provoked when handled because their venom contains a powerful neurotoxin called tetrodotoxin.

The species tends to have a lifespan around two to three years, which may vary depending on factors such as nutrition, temperature, and the intensity of light within its environment.

Behavior

Blue-ringed octopuses spend most of their time hiding in crevices while displaying effective camouflage patterns with their dermal chromatophore cells. Like all octopuses, they can change shape easily, which allows them to squeeze into small crevices. This, along with piling up rocks outside the entrance to their lairs, helps safeguard them from predators.

If they are provoked, they quickly change color, becoming bright yellow with each of the 50–60 rings flashing bright iridescent blue within a third of a second, as an aposematic warning display. In the greater blue-ringed octopus (H. lunulata), the rings contain multilayer light reflectors called iridophores. These are arranged to reflect blue–green light in a wide viewing direction. Beneath and around each ring are dark-pigmented chromatophores that can be expanded within one second to enhance the contrast of the rings. No chromatophores are above the ring, which is unusual for cephalopods, as they typically use chromatophores to cover or spectrally modify iridescence. The fast flashes of the blue rings are achieved using muscles that are under neural control. Under normal circumstances, each ring is hidden by contraction of muscles above the iridophores. When these relax and muscles outside the ring contract, the iridescence is exposed, thereby revealing the blue color.

Toxicity

The blue-ringed octopus, despite its small size, carries enough venom to kill 26 adult humans within minutes. Their bites are tiny and often painless, with many victims not realizing they have been envenomated until respiratory depression and paralysis begins. No blue-ringed octopus antivenom is available

The octopus produces venom containing tetrodotoxin, histamine, tryptamine, octopamine, taurine, acetylcholine, and dopamine. The venom can result in nausea, respiratory arrest, heart failure, severe and sometimes total paralysis, and blindness, and can lead to death within minutes if not treated. Death is usually caused by suffocation due to paralysis of the diaphragm.

Direct contact is necessary to be envenomated. Faced with danger, the octopus’s first instinct is to flee. If the threat persists, the octopus goes into a defensive stance, and displays its blue rings. If the octopus is cornered and touched, it may bite and envenomate its attacker.

Conservation

Currently, the blue-ringed octopus population information is listed as least concern according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature. Threats such as bioprospecting, habitat fragmentation, degradation, overfishing, and human disturbance, as well as species collections for aquarium trade, though, may be threats to population numbers. Hapalochlaena possibly contributes to a variety of advantages to marine conservation. This genus of octopus provides stability of habitat biodiversity, as well as expanding the balance of marine food webs.

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  • RNAi [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    9 minutes ago

    Pirated Sekiro not only runs, it runs way smoother than any other game I have installed.

    I suck ass at it, everyone’s gonna die of the rot

  • tombruzzo [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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    45 minutes ago

    John Fed: Bones, you really ‘cracked’ the case on this one.

    Bones: Bones don’t crack. They fracture or break.

    John Office: Stares at camera.

    Goth chick from NCIS: What am I doing here? I’m supposed to be on NCIS.

  • Carl [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    1 hour ago

    alright. walked away from my project today with everything in a pretty good place. i had to expand my scope to forking not just one but two other projects in order to add features i need to them, but everything i made works again and I’m not untying a gordian knot of conflicts, so tomorrow i can get back to introducing new features (tying the next knot).

  • WokePalpatine [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    1 hour ago

    YouTube channels being able to share other videos into your subscription feed is so fucking annoying. Internet companies are constantly attacking your ability to look at what you want and not what they shove at you.

      • WokePalpatine [he/him]@hexbear.net
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        25 minutes ago

        Also, 10 years we’re going to see the exact same videos now about using dumb phones, not using streaming services, etc. But it’s going to be about how they don’t use LLM generators to do things and maybe 2.5% of the population will be successfully motivated by this. Everyone else will say it’s a classmarker to not use LLMs.

  • Pisha [she/her, they/them]@hexbear.net
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    3 hours ago

    I want to ask you all for some reading recommendations on the history of the GDR. This is for a party thing I’m doing, so I’m looking for something credible that’s not just anti-communist propaganda (and also not just apologia, but that’s less of an issue obviously). I’ve heard that the PDS published a whole book series, but I’m having trouble finding it. Can anyone point me at some books or texts? Thanks!

    • WokePalpatine [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      1 hour ago

      Make a post about this outside the mega, maybe. I don’t see much engagement on topics like this here. Lemmygrad might have some posters who can help too.

      The only book about this I have downloaded, but not read yet, is ‘Stasi State Or Socialist Paradise’ by John Green & Brunit De La Motte.

  • qcop [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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    4 hours ago

    Might have finally found an org near me! I was getting tired of only organizing my workplace and no long term political goals. Had a nice chat with one member and they made it clear they were trying to build a committed ML org. Hope it will work out!

  • Moss [they/them]@hexbear.net
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    5 hours ago

    Are Americans really that weird about swearing? Like I just saw a post on Instagram by an American saying “if you feel bad about swearing at work”… like is that actually a thing? Do you not swear in front of your boss or something?