If the octopus is threatened, it would spray some F##king ink at thge prey to stop it
It depends on what your mothers fathers grandmas sister thinks.....
Fred
The whole species of octopus is not entirely endangered, but there are some subspecies that are endangered, threatened, or close to being endangered: The Giant Octopus, a giant but gentle octopus, is listed as "Endangered" on the ICUN Redlist.
Whenever it feels threatened.
They are not endangered. Nor are they threatened. They are in fact sensitive to polluted waters.
when it is threatened
unicorns, bigfoot, beavcoons, hippogriffs, tree octopus, elves and trolls, etc...
Of the two species of elephant, the Asian Elephant is endangered and the African Elephant is currently considered vulnerable. There is some debate about the conservation status of the African Elephant. No octopus is currently on the Endangered or Threatened list, however little is known about the population sizes for most octopus species.
The whole species of octopus is not entirely endangered, but there are some subspecies that are endangered, threatened, or close to being endangered: The Giant Octopus, a giant but gentle octopus, is listed as "Endangered" on the ICUN Redlist. The Pacific Northwestern Tree Octopus is not currently listed as endangered, but some people think that they should be because of their small numbers. There are probably many other endangered subspecies, but they are probably not as well known.
No they don't. They use chromataphores to make blue rings around their tentacles when they feel threatened. It is used as a warning sign.
Yes, a common octopus is a type of octopus
what is a male octopus called
The octopus is an invertebrate... It has no skeleton.