A rare “Dumbo” octopus was spotted by scientists during a deep-sea research dive done by their unmanned robotic submersible off the coast of California.
Scientists from the non-profit Ocean Exploration Trust were exploring a region near an underwater volcano when the octopod measuring approximately 60 centimetres drifted past the camera of their research vessel E/V Nautilus.
- Corb Lund says ‘Water Not Coal’ petition drive has collected enough signatures
- Possible glacial lake outburst prompts evacuation alert northeast of Pemberton
- Incoming high-water levels to raise Saskatoon waterline by over half a meter
- Liberals to delay proposed changes for major project environmental reviews
The sea creature is so named because flapping fins on the side of its head resemble the famous Disney character.
Get breaking National news
Also called an umbrella octopus, it lives on the ocean floor at depths of 2.7-4 km, according to the Tree of Life Project, an online website researching biodiversity.
Comments
Comments closed.
Due to the sensitive and/or legal subject matter of some of the content on globalnews.ca, we reserve the ability to disable comments from time to time.
Please see our Commenting Policy for more.