Octopus Magna Mollusca
The octopus magna mollusca are the king and queens of the sea. They are one family that dominates the sea. The octopus magna mollusca are sea creatures designed to live and propagate not to be broken and be molded by the power of the sea. The octopus magna mollusca would easily catch your eye because of their particular color or interesting pattern, for many others it was the beauty of their brokenness, while others’ wholeness and completeness were breathtaking. For only their shells that we see- we are pleased and we appreciate how they were made. Much more if we see the octopus magna mollusca stood out, moving, showing their faces that apart from the rest of the shells, distinct, alone, almost begging to be noticed.
To understand it very clearly let us dissect the tree words - octopus magna mollusca. First the family name mollusca are a Latin word “mollis” meaning soft. The mollusca are a very successful group in the animal kingdom because over 160,000 species have been described, of which around 128,000 are living and about 35,000 are recorded as fossil species. The octopus magna mollusca is one of the creatures that compose the molllusca family and are found in nearly all habitats throughout the world. In the sea they occur from the deepest ocean trenches to the intertidal zone and they are along the seashores sometimes as a whole but most of the times, only their houses or their shells.
Second, let us discuss the octopus magna as the first name of the phrase octopus magna mollusca. The octopus magna are characterized by their eight arms, usually with sucker cups on them. These arms are a type of muscular hydrostat. Three defensive mechanisms of are typical of octopuses are the ink sacs, camouflage, and autotomising limbs. Most octopuses can eject thick blackish ink in a large cloud to aid in escaping from predators. They also have specialized skin cells both for color changing and light reflection and refraction. The octopus magna mollusca use this ability to blend into the environment to hide, as communication with other octopuses, or as a warning. When under attack, some octopuses can autotomise their limbs, in a similar manner to skinks and other lizards. The crawling arm serves as a distraction to would-be predators; this ability is also used in mating.
The octopus magna mollusca are also called devilfish. They are a predatory mollusc with a pouch-shaped body and eight powerful arms with two rows of suction discs on each. It also has an ink sac, which it uses to darken the water when it senses danger. The octopus magna mollusca are related to squids, cuttlefish, nautiloid, and other molluscs such as snails, mussels and clams. They can creep over hard surfaces using their arms; when they travel through water they move by jet propulsion, taking in water and ejecting it forcibly through a funnel as their muscular mantle contracts. They vary in size from a few centimetres to the giant octopus of the Pacific Ocean, which can grow to over 10 meters, and some species are edible.




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