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The Biological Bulletin, Vol 198, Issue 1 94-100, Copyright © 2000 by Marine Biological Laboratory


JOURNAL ARTICLE

Egg brooding by deep-sea octopuses in the North Pacific Ocean

JR Voight and AJ Grehan
Department of Zoology, Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago, Illinois 60605, USA. Jvoight@fmnh.org

Videotapes made from the submersible Alvin on Baby Bare, a 2600-m-deep North Pacific basalt outcrop, and at two other deep-sea localities document that octopuses of the genera Graneledone and Benthoctopus attach their eggs to hard substrate and apparently brood them through development. The behavior of brooding females was generally similar to that of shallow-water octopuses, but the genera showed apparent differences. In addition to the high density of brooding females observed at Baby Bare, which may relate to the increased availability of exposed hard substrates for egg attachment and of prey, females are suggested to increasingly associate with hard substrates as they mature. The biology of Baby Bare may seem unduly unique because the outcrop is isolated on a sedimented plain and is among the few exposures of hard substrate other than hydrothermal vents that have been explored by submersible. On the sediment-covered ocean floor, the availability of hard substrate may strongly affect the distribution of brooding octopuses. The size and shape of boreholes in 19 of over 400 thyasirid clam shells collected from Baby Bare support the hypothesis that octopuses had preyed upon the clams.


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J. C. Drazen, S. K. Goffredi, B. Schlining, and D. S. Stakes
Aggregations of Egg-Brooding Deep-Sea Fish and Cephalopods on the Gorda Escarpment: a Reproductive Hot Spot
Biol. Bull., August 1, 2003; 205(1): 1 - 7.
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