Greetings,
This is my third attempt to post this message...so I hope it works! For the past five months, we have been keeping an octopus in my 5th grade classroom in a 20-gallon aquarium. I let my top scoring science kids feed it by hand twice a week as an academic award. You'd be surprised how my kid's science scores have improved. Anyways, the octopus shares its domain with a Mexican gulf opaleye, about two dozen hermit crabs, and two dozen turbo snails. In all this time, the octopus has never eaten or attacked any of its tank mates. When we initially received the octopus from Florida, it was missing parts of three arms, which have since completely grown back. I was wondering if our octopus is a vulgaris? Any inputs? It's mantle is the size of a ping-pong ball and has a tentacle span of about 10 inches. I will try to post a few pictures of the ceph, now that we have the digital video recorder up and working. The kids love the octopus!
This is my third attempt to post this message...so I hope it works! For the past five months, we have been keeping an octopus in my 5th grade classroom in a 20-gallon aquarium. I let my top scoring science kids feed it by hand twice a week as an academic award. You'd be surprised how my kid's science scores have improved. Anyways, the octopus shares its domain with a Mexican gulf opaleye, about two dozen hermit crabs, and two dozen turbo snails. In all this time, the octopus has never eaten or attacked any of its tank mates. When we initially received the octopus from Florida, it was missing parts of three arms, which have since completely grown back. I was wondering if our octopus is a vulgaris? Any inputs? It's mantle is the size of a ping-pong ball and has a tentacle span of about 10 inches. I will try to post a few pictures of the ceph, now that we have the digital video recorder up and working. The kids love the octopus!