Close Menu
Ztoog
    What's Hot
    Crypto

    Bitcoin Breakout Or Breakdown? Ark Invest Shares Prediction

    Mobile

    OnePlus 12R specs and launch date leak

    Mobile

    Release date, price, rumors, features we want to see

    Important Pages:
    • About Us
    • Contact us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    Ztoog
    • Home
    • The Future

      Any wall can be turned into a camera to see around corners

      JD Vance and President Trump’s Sons Hype Bitcoin at Las Vegas Conference

      AI may already be shrinking entry-level jobs in tech, new research suggests

      Today’s NYT Strands Hints, Answer and Help for May 26 #449

      LiberNovo Omni: The World’s First Dynamic Ergonomic Chair

    • Technology

      A Replit employee details a critical security flaw in web apps created using AI-powered app builder Lovable that exposes API keys and personal info of app users (Reed Albergotti/Semafor)

      Gemini in Google Drive can now help you skip watching that painfully long Zoom meeting

      Apple iPhone exports from China to the US fall 76% as India output surges

      Today’s NYT Wordle Hints, Answer and Help for May 26, #1437

      5 Skills Kids (and Adults) Need in an AI World – O’Reilly

    • Gadgets

      Future-proof your career by mastering AI skills for just $20

      8 Best Vegan Meal Delivery Services and Kits (2025), Tested and Reviewed

      Google Home is getting deeper Gemini integration and a new widget

      Google Announces AI Ultra Subscription Plan With Premium Features

      Google shows off Android XR-based glasses, announces Warby Parker team-up

    • Mobile

      Deals: the Galaxy S25 series comes with a free tablet, Google Pixels heavily discounted

      Microsoft is done being subtle – this new tool screams “upgrade now”

      Wallpaper Wednesday: Android wallpapers 2025-05-28

      Google can make smart glasses accessible with Warby Parker, Gentle Monster deals

      vivo T4 Ultra specs leak

    • Science

      Analysts Say Trump Trade Wars Would Harm the Entire US Energy Sector, From Oil to Solar

      Do we have free will? Quantum experiments may soon reveal the answer

      Was Planet Nine exiled from the solar system as a baby?

      How farmers can help rescue water-loving birds

      A trip to the farm where loofahs grow on vines

    • AI

      Rationale engineering generates a compact new tool for gene therapy | Ztoog

      The AI Hype Index: College students are hooked on ChatGPT

      Learning how to predict rare kinds of failures | Ztoog

      Anthropic’s new hybrid AI model can work on tasks autonomously for hours at a time

      AI learns how vision and sound are connected, without human intervention | Ztoog

    • Crypto

      GameStop bought $500 million of bitcoin

      CoinW Teams Up with Superteam Europe to Conclude Solana Hackathon and Accelerate Web3 Innovation in Europe

      Ethereum Net Flows Turn Negative As Bulls Push For $3,500

      Bitcoin’s Power Compared To Nuclear Reactor By Brazilian Business Leader

      Senate advances GENIUS Act after cloture vote passes

    Ztoog
    Home » Secrets of the Octopus takes us inside the world of these “aliens on Earth”
    Technology

    Secrets of the Octopus takes us inside the world of these “aliens on Earth”

    Facebook Twitter Pinterest WhatsApp
    Secrets of the Octopus takes us inside the world of these “aliens on Earth”
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest WhatsApp

    Enlarge / A Day octopus (Octopus cyanea) named Scarlet parachutes her net over a coral head whereas Dr. Alex Schnell observes.

    National Geographic/Disney/Craig Parry

    With Earth Day quick approaching as soon as once more, it is time for an additional new documentary from National Geographic and Disney+:  Secrets of the Octopus. It’s the third in what has turn into a sequence, beginning with the outstanding 2021 documentary Secrets of the Whales (narrated by Sigourney Weaver) and 2023’s Secrets of the Elephants (Natalie Portman as narrator). James Cameron served as producer on all three.

    Secrets of the Octopus is narrated by Paul Rudd. Per the official synopsis:

    Octopuses are like aliens on Earth: three hearts, blue blood and the capacity to squeeze by an area the dimension of their eyeballs. But there may be a lot extra to these extraordinary animals. Intelligent sufficient to make use of instruments or remodel their our bodies to imitate different animals and even talk with totally different species, the secrets and techniques of the octopus are extra extraordinary than we ever imagined.

    Each of the three episodes focuses on a selected distinctive characteristic of these fascinating creatures: “Shapeshifters,” “Masterminds,” and “Social Networks.” The animals had been filmed of their pure habitats over 200 days and all that gorgeous footage is accompanied by considerate commentary by featured scientists.  One of these scientists is Dr. Alex Schnell,  a local Australian and self described storytelling who has labored at Macquarie University, the University of Cambridge, and the Marine Biological Laboratory, amongst different establishments. Her analysis focuses on the intelligence of marine animals, notably cuttlefish and octopuses.

    Ars caught up with Schnell to be taught extra.

    Ars Technica: How did you turn into taken with finding out octopuses?

    Alex Schnell: I had this pivotal second after I was younger. I had the luxurious of really rising up on the seashores of Sydney so I’d spend rather a lot of time in the water, in rock swimming pools, all the critters. When I used to be about 5 years outdated, I met my first octopus. It was such a monumental second that opened up a very totally different world for me. That’s the day I made a decision I needed to be a marine biologist.

    • Alex Schnell prepares for a dive on the Great Barrier Reef


      National Geographic for Disney/Craig Parry

    • Alex Schnell SCUBA dives over a coral backyard on the Great Barrier Reef, whereas an Australian analysis vessel floats on the floor above.


      National Geographic for Disney/Craig Parry

    • A Day octopus perched on corals on the Great Barrier Reef.


      National Geographic/Disney/Richard Woodgett

    • Director and DOP Adam Geiger operates a jib arm with Producer / Camera operator, Rory McGuinness, and Camera Assistant, Woody Spark.


      National Geographic for Disney/Annabel Robinson

    • Woody Spark getting ready cameras and underwater housings with cinematographer Rory McGuinness.


      National Geographic for Disney/Harriet Spark

    • Alex Schnell observes a Mimic octopus (Thaumoctopus mimicus) whereas on a dive with wildlife photographer and native dive information, Benhur Sarinda


      National Geographic for Disney/Craig Parry

    • A Mimic octopus, with striped pores and skin patterning, stretches out all eight arms throughout black volcanic sand.


      National Geographic for Disney/Craig Parry

    • A Blue-ringed octopus (Hapalochlaena maculosa) shows vibrant blue rings, a warning that the venom in her chunk is lethal.


      National Geographic

    Ars Technica: What is the focus of your analysis?

    Alex Schnell:  I’m a marine biologist that changed into a comparative psychologist—only a fancy phrase for finding out the totally different minds of animals. What I’m actually is how intelligence developed, the place and when. The octopus is the good candidate to reply some of these questions as a result of they diverge from our personal lineage over 550 million years in the past. We share an ancestor that appeared like a flat worm. So if the octopus reveals glimmers of intelligence that we see in ourselves or in animals which might be intently associated to us, it reveals rather a lot about the patterns of evolution and the way it developed all through the animal kingdom.

    When you meet an octopus, you actually get the sense that there’s one other being looking at you. A number of years in the past, I labored with a group at London School of Economics to jot down a report reviewing the proof of sentience in animals. Does the animal have the capability to really feel feelings? We discovered actually sturdy proof in octopuses and it ended up altering UK legislation. Now beneath UK legislation, we now have to deal with octopuses ethically and with compassion.

    Advertisement

    Ars Technica: One behavioral facet the sequence explores is device use by octopuses. I used to be struck by the scene the place a little bit coconut octopus makes use of her clamshell each for shelter and as a protect. I’ve by no means seen that earlier than.

    Alex Schnell: Neither had I. Before we traveled to Indonesia on that shoot, I had examine that exact defensive device use by the coconut octopus. This species will typically be seen carrying round two halves of a coconut, like a cellular den or an RV dwelling. And they use it as safety as a result of they dwell in a really barren sandy panorama. So I used to be actually excited to see that conduct unfold.

    We obtained greater than we bargained for, as a result of in the clip that you simply talked about, our coconut octopus was being threatened by this indignant mantis shrimp. They pack a very highly effective punch that is been recognized to interrupt by aquarium glass. And right here we now have this defenseless little octopus with no bones or something. In that second we witnessed her have this concept. She walked over to the shell and picked it up and dragged it again to her authentic spot and actually used it like a protect to fend off this indignant mantis shrimp. She had imagined herself a protect.  I noticed her get an thought, she imagined it, and he or she walked over it and used it. I used to be so blown away that I used to be screaming with pleasure underwater.

    • Rory McGuinnes, working an underwater jib arm to movie a colourful coral reef on the Lembeh Strait.


      National Geographic for Disney/Adam Geiger

    • Woody Spark assessments the controls for the underwater camera-and-slider system


      National Geographic for Disney/Adam Geiger

    • Local dive guides Reifani and Benhur Sarinda observe a Coconut octopus (Amphioctopus marginatus) sheltering between two clam shells.


      National Geographic for Disney/Adam Geiger

    • Woody Spark makes use of the underwater camera-and-slider system to movie a Coconut octopus sheltering between clam shells.


      National Geographic for Disney/Adam Geiger

    • An 8-foot Giant Pacific octopus (Enteroctopus dofleini) rests on the arms of tech diver and octopus fanatic, Krystal Janicki, on a dive in the shallow waters off Vancouver Island.


      National Geographic for Disney/Maxwel Hohn

    • A Giant Pacific octopus crawls over the sandy seafloor in shallow waters


      National Geographic for Disney/Maxwel Hohn

    • Dr. C.E. O’Brien observes a resting Island octopus (Octopus insularis) on a dive in Turks and Caicos.


      National Geographic for Disney/Adam Geiger

    Ars Technica: At one level in the sequence you have fun having a “dialog” with an octopus. How do octopuses talk?  

    Alex Schnell: Octopuses usually talk with modifications to their pores and skin. They can change the colour and the texture of their pores and skin in the blink of a watch, they usually also can change their posture. What we have discovered with one explicit species is that they’ve cross-species communication, so that they collaboratively hunt with some reef fish. Again, I had solely examine this conduct till I had an opportunity to see it in particular person.

    I had this type of playful thought whereas I used to be down there with a Day octopus named Scarlet, who was permitting me to observe her on rather a lot of her hunts. Because I used to be so near her, I observed she was lacking little crabs right here and there. Normally her fish searching accomplice will do a head stand to level to the place the missed meals is. I assumed, I ponder what is going on to occur if I simply level at it, not anticipating something. To my astonishment, she responded and swum proper over and appeared the place I had pointed.

    So that is what I imply by having a dialog with an octopus. I can not change colour sadly, but it surely’s as if she was responding to my pointing, my “referential signaling,” which is unbelievable as a result of that is type of what we see in people and chimpanzees: this improvement of communication earlier than language develops. Here we now have this octopus responding to a human pointing.

    Ars Technica: Scarlet really reached out her little tentacle to you on a number of events; she appeared to acknowledge you and settle for you. 

    Alex Schnell: I had had these moments earlier than, the ET second the place you get to fulfill an octopus, and I’ve spoken to different avid divers and individuals who have a love for octopuses which have had comparable experiences. The actually particular factor with this relationship that I had with Scarlet is that we had been capable of develop it over weeks and months. Every time I’d return to her, she would seem to acknowledge me rapidly and let me again into her world.

    Advertisement

    What continues to blow me away is that Scarlet grew to belief me actually rapidly. She reached out and shook my hand after half-hour of me watching her, and he or she let me swim alongside her as she hunted. This is a creature with no skeleton, no shell, no tooth, no claws to guard itself. And regardless of that excessive vulnerability, she rapidly let her guard down. It’s like she was pushed by curiosity and this want to achieve out and join, even with an alien creature like me.

    Ars Technica: I used to be stunned to be taught that octopuses have such brief lifespans. 

    Alex Schnell: Rather a lot individuals ask me in the event that they lived longer, would they take over the world? Maybe. It’s life in the quick lane. They are basically born as orphans as a result of they have no dad and mom or siblings to information them. They simply drift off. They’re loners for many of their lives they usually educate themselves. Everything is pushed by this intense curiosity to be taught. I feel that is why rather a lot of individuals have had these unbelievable moments with octopuses as a result of even the worry or the vulnerability that they may really feel is outweighed by a curiosity to work together.

    • Alex Schnell on the floor in full SCUBA gear.


      National Geographic/Harriet Spark

    • A Coconut octopus pokes a watch out from between partially buried clam shells. Her highly effective suckers maintain the two shells collectively for cover from passing predators.


      National Geographic for Disney/Craig Parry

    • Alex Schnell and Benhur Sarinda observe a Coconut octopus strolling throughout the seafloor with clam shells held beneath her net.


      National Geographic for Disney/Craig Parry)

    • A tiny Coconut octopus reaches out to the touch Alex Schnell’s hand.


      National Geographic for Disney/Craig Parry

    • An Algae octopus (Abdopus aculeatus) foraging amongst the algae and seagrass in Bunaken Marine Park.


      National Geographic/Annabel Robinson

    • Alex Schnell observing a Southern keeled octopus (Octopus berrima) on an evening dive in Port Phillip Bay


      National Geographic

    • A Dorado octopus mom group with eggs


      Schmidt Ocean Institute

    Ars Technica: Do you end up having to be on guard about anthropomorphizing these superb creatures a bit an excessive amount of? 

    Alex Schnell: I feel there is a positive steadiness. As a educated comparative psychologist, we’re taught to be actually cautious to not anthropomorphize and attribute human traits onto the animals that we see or that we work with. At the similar time, I feel that we have moved too far right into a scenario that Frans de Waal known as “anthro-denialism.” Traits did not simply sprout up in the human species. They have an evolutionary historical past, and whereas they may not be precisely the similar in different animals, there are similarities. So typically we have to name it what it’s. One of der Waal’s examples was researchers who described chimpanzees kissing as “mouth-to-mouth contact” as a result of they did not wish to anthropomorphize it. Come on guys, they’re kissing.

    We do try to see human traits in different animals. We watched cartoons rising up, we had pets round us, so it is actually onerous to not. Our job is as comparative psychologists is to seek out actually sturdy proof for the similarities and the variations between the totally different minds of the animals that we share our planet with.

    Ars Technica: What had been some of the highlights for you, filming this documentary sequence? 

    Alex Schnell: It was difficult in the sense that when the manufacturing group first approached me, I used to be 38 weeks pregnant. So I went out into the discipline with a five-month-old child. I used to be sleep-deprived, making an attempt to go diving and likewise be on digicam. I had labored on pure historical past movies earlier than, however at all times on the different aspect of the digicam. So it was a steep studying curve.

    But it was such a rewarding expertise to have the ability to have the luxurious of time to be out with these animals. I had no venture as a result of I used to be on maternity go away. Sometimes once you’re half of a venture, you will get tunnel imaginative and prescient.  “I’m going to see this explicit conduct and that is what I’m focusing on.” But I might be fully conscious in the second with my time with octopuses and get to see how they work together of their pure surroundings. It opens up this unbelievable secret world that they’ve.  I used to be seeing issues that, sure, I’d examine some of them, however some I’d by no means heard of earlier than. I feel every episode on this sequence reveals secrets and techniques that may take your breath away.

    Ars Technica:  What is subsequent for you?

    Alex Schnell:  I’m working on a venture known as One World, Many Minds. What this venture strives to do is intensify that, sure, we’re one world, however there are a lot of minds that make up our collective existence. I actually wish to showcase the minds of animals like the octopus or the cuttlefish or an enormous grouper, and present that we now have traits that we will acknowledge, that we will join with. That will assist take away a barrier of otherness, and spotlight our shared vulnerability and interconnectedness with animals.

    Secrets of the Octopus premieres on Disney+ and Hulu on April 22, 2024.

    Secrets of the Octopus official trailer.

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp

    Related Posts

    Technology

    A Replit employee details a critical security flaw in web apps created using AI-powered app builder Lovable that exposes API keys and personal info of app users (Reed Albergotti/Semafor)

    Technology

    Gemini in Google Drive can now help you skip watching that painfully long Zoom meeting

    Technology

    Apple iPhone exports from China to the US fall 76% as India output surges

    Technology

    Today’s NYT Wordle Hints, Answer and Help for May 26, #1437

    Technology

    5 Skills Kids (and Adults) Need in an AI World – O’Reilly

    Technology

    How To Come Back After A Layoff

    Technology

    Are Democrats fumbling a golden opportunity?

    Technology

    Crypto elite increasingly worried about their personal safety

    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Follow Us
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    Top Posts
    Mobile

    The Galaxy S25 Ultra could bring two key camera upgrades

    Robert Triggs / Android AuthorityGalaxy S24 UltraTL;DR The Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra’s camera specs have…

    AI

    Eric Evans to step down as director of MIT Lincoln Laboratory | Ztoog

    Eric Evans shall be stepping down as director of MIT Lincoln Laboratory on July 1,…

    Science

    Sea Urchins Help to Develop Self-Sharpening Tools

    Sea urchins are powerful creatures. Not solely due to their sharp quills, but additionally due…

    Science

    Big satellite sends fast cell signal down to Earth

    This week, an organization referred to as AST SpaceMobile introduced that it had efficiently transmitted…

    AI

    This AI Paper Unveils an Enhanced CycleGAN Approach for Robust Person Re-identification Across Varied Camera Styles

    Person re-identification (ReID) goals to determine people throughout a number of non-overlapping cameras. The problem…

    Our Picks
    Technology

    Overlooked No More: Ángela Ruiz Robles, Inventor of an Early E-Reader

    Science

    SpaceX’s workhorse launch pad now has the accoutrements for astronauts

    Science

    X-37B: Space Force’s secretive space plane is making its highest flight yet

    Categories
    • AI (1,493)
    • Crypto (1,753)
    • Gadgets (1,805)
    • Mobile (1,851)
    • Science (1,866)
    • Technology (1,802)
    • The Future (1,648)
    Most Popular
    AI

    Google DeepMind and the University of Tokyo Researchers Introduce WebAgent: An LLM-Driven Agent that can Complete the Tasks on Real Websites Following Natural Language Instructions

    The Future

    Megalopolis’ Twisty Saga to Theaters Isn’t Quite Over Yet

    AI

    AI agents help explain other AI systems | Ztoog

    Ztoog
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • Home
    • About Us
    • Contact us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    © 2025 Ztoog.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.