the genus and species of the common octopus is Octopus vulgaris.
For the genus and species of specific octopuses you would have to look up because they are different.
The octopus are a group of animals, and not a single species. The scientific name for the octopuses is actually simply Octopoda; it is the name of the order to which all of the octopus belong.
Octopodiformes. the above is probably an order of octopus Some species include Octopus vulgaris Enteroctopus dolfeini Hapalochlaena lunulata
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Mollusca
Class: Cephalopoda
Order: Octopoda (this refers to any eight-armed cephalopod). True octopuses are members of the genus Octopus.
The genus and species of the common Octopus is Octopus vulgaris, these differ with specific types.
Hope this answers your question satisfactorily!
Name of common octopus is Octopus vulgaris .see link below .
Family name: Octopodidae
Order name: Octopoda
Common name: Mimic octopus
Scientific name: Thaumoctopus mimicus
Order "Octopoda" in class "Cephalopoda."
Cynea
cephalpod
there are 289 species of octopus
octopus have 200000 species spiecies
There are around 300 recognized octopus species.
Octopus bimaculoides
It appears to vary from species to species. For example, Octopus aegina has it; but Octopus vulgaris does not.
Octopus is commonly known as the devil fish. There is no species of that name "Devilfish Octopus". But octopuses have a large variety in sizes as well in species. here is a website with a list of species and their sizes.
There are current 300 recognised species of octopus.
No. Cuttlefish are a different species from octopus
There are quite a few species of octopus in the waters around Antarctica. Antarctica was the ancestral home of the octopus millions of years ago and all current otcopus species are descended from that one Antarctic octopus species.
Yes, species of Octopus do indeed live in the coral reefs. However, there are also species of Octopus that live in other marine environments, including the ocean deeps.
Yes, species of Octopus do indeed live in the coral reefs. However, there are also species of Octopus that live in other marine environments, including the ocean deeps.
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