National Geographic - UK (2019-07)

(Antfer) #1

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BASIC INSTINCTS


LEST YOU DOUBT the awesome power of the drive to procreate,


consider what Mr. and Mrs. Argonaut (Argonauta argo) must go


through to send baby argonauts out into the world.


This octopus species lives in open water in Earth’s tropical and


subtropical seas. It’s not the easiest place to find a mate, espe-


cially since the male is tiny—less than three-quarters of an inch


long—while the female can be up to 30 times his size. She has two


specialized dorsal arms that secrete a chalky substance, forming


a pleated shell in which she can hide, float, and brood eggs. The


male is sans shell, but he too has a specialized arm: a tentacle-like,


detachable copulatory organ called a hectocotylus.


After attaching to the female, the male releases his hectocotylus,


which worms its way into the female’s mantle cavity. She may


stockpile these disembodied sperm arms from several mates and


use them to fertilize her eggs over time. She’ll lay strings of eggs


tethered to her shell (also called an egg case) where she can tend


them as they develop. Scientists know this because they’ve been


able to observe argonaut mothers live—but not fathers.


After donating his paternal part, no male has been seen alive


growing a new one; only dead specimens have been found. As his last


act, the small but mighty paterfamilias gives an arm and a life to the


cause of reproduction. —PATRICIA EDMONDS AND EVA VAN DEN BERG


HOW DOES THIS OCEANIC ODD


COUPLE MANAGE TO HAVE SEX?


PHOTOGRAPH BY JULIAN FINN


Greater argonaut


(Argonauta argo)



  1. NAME GAME


This species of octopus is


also known as the paper


nautilus (the shell it builds


to hold its eggs is made of


paper-thin calcium carbon-


ate). The Chinese name for the


species translates to “white


seahorse’s nest.”



  1. ARGONAUT MYTH


In 300 B.C. Aristotle described


his vision of a female argonaut


using her shell as a boat and


her tentacles as sails and oars.


In 2010 octopus experts Julian


Finn and Mark Norman docu-


mented what actually occurs:


The argonaut moves by expel-


ling jets of water, surfaces


enough to trap air in her shell,


then is buoyed at an optimal


water level by the air bubble.



  1. COMMON, ELUSIVE


Though rarely seen by


humans, A. argo is widespread


in Earth’s more tropical oceans.


It’s preyed upon by tuna,


dolphins, and billfishes but


still described as of least


concern on the IUCN Red List


of Threatened Species.


J. FINN, MUSEUMS VICTORIA, AUSTRALIA; TAYLOR MAGGIACOMO, NGM STAFF (ILLUSTRATION)

Female, 17 inches Male, 0.6 in

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