Friday, January 17, 2014

End of an era

Today marks the official day that I no longer have an octopus tank on Coconut Island.  I've just cleaned it out and it will soon belong to someone new! I heard a rumor there will be fish in there, maybe even as soon as this afternoon.  Exciting new research is happening all the time.

Cleaning it out was not as trivial as I may have made it sound. Over the years, I have cleaned it periodically, but a substantial number of organisms made that tank their home.  There were sea cucumbers, tunicates (sea squirts), snails, worms, corraline algae, barnacles, and even clams! It took me several days to carefully pick through the detritus to make sure I had rescued all the live animals from the tank (or at least as many as was humanly possible).


This little resident of the tank is a juvenile warty sea cucumber. They are ADORABLE when they are juveniles, with their beautiful yellowy-green coloration dotted with small black papillae, but when they grow up--BAM, ugly brown warty blob!  Below you can see an adult (the picture was taken by a very talented fellow researcher from Coconut Island).  


Although, perhaps I am being too harsh. I'm sure it is very attractive to other warty sea cucumbers... As long as it doesn't spew out its sticky bluish-white cuvierian tubules.  Wow, I just read the wikipedia article on cuvierian tubules, check this out--"When stressed, the sea cucumber faces away from the attacker and contracts its body wall muscles sharply. This causes the wall of the cloaca to tear and the anus to gape and the free ends of some of the tubes to be ejected. Water from the respiratory tree is forced into these tubules causing a rapid expansion and they elongate by up to twenty times their original length. They have great tensile strength and become sticky when they encounter any object. "

The tearing cloaca and gaping anus certainly paints a picture...

Aaaaand, moving on to a more pleasant image-


This little guy is a flame file clam. They can "swim" around the tank by squirting water out of their siphon. But, in general, they like to make a little nest for themselves among algae and rocks where they can sit and filter feed away from predators.  All of those stringy orange things around the outside are special tentacles that help it feed, but they can also drop off when then are threatened. I tried not to disturb these guys too much when I transferred them to the ocean, but inevitably, I got a few tentacles on me. I tried to read about whether they can regenerate their tentacles, but wasn't able to find any literature on that. They all seemed to find a new little nook to scurry into pretty quickly though, so I think they will survive.

One of the things I had in my octopus tank forever was an oversized rubber ducky.  I had originally thought to throw it away, but one of the shark researchers quickly rescued it and put it in among the sharks. Here it is in it's new home. Yay shark-duck love! Oh, wait, that sounds wrong...  Well, shark-duck friendship anyway. 


And now, the tank is clean, free of critters and ready to be home to someone new. Certainly the end of an era for me. Four years of octopus wrangling coming to an end, but many more months of writing still await me... Off to work!




2 comments:

Saaraliisa said...

Wow, fun little creatures. Why is all of that blocked out? I don't understand.
Yay ducky! ox

heather said...

Ooops, there was something weird with the background, I fixed it now, thanks!