Ghost Octopus Courtesy-of-NOAA

Creature Feature – Ghost Octopus

This week is the letter ‘G’, and today’s featured creature is the Ghost Octopus.

The species were first discovered in 2016 in the Pacific Ocean. It is thought there are two species, but neither have been formally named with a binomial name as no specimens have yet been collected – they are only known from imagery! 

Ghost Octopus Courtesy-of-NOAA

Taxonomy

Scientific Name: Not Named Yet

Kingdom: Animalia

Phylum: Mollusca

Sub-Order: Inncirrina

Family: Unknown

Genus: Unknown

Courtesy-of-NOAA

Ghost Octopus Fact File

? Size: Individuals are thought to grow up to 12cm in length

? Distribution: This species was discovered near the Hawaiian archipelago, at a depth of 2.6 km

? Diet: Little is known about the species, but it is likely they feed on crustaceans, worms, bivalves, and copepods

? Behaviour: To reproduce, it will attach a clutch of about 30 quarter-sized eggs to the stalk of a dead sponge. It will then wrap it’s whole body around it, staying in this position for several years. During this period it will not feed, wasting away until the eggs hatch and the, subsequently the individual dies

? IUCN Status: Not Classified. Though this species lays its eggs on dead sponges that grow on the seabed and unfortunately these areas are very slow growing and a potential target for deep-sea mining