We use cookies to improve your experience, some are essential for the operation of this site.
About the cookies we use
Accept
Log in
ImportActions
Selections
0
Settings
View items
Field search
Subject search
Location search
Recent searches
Documentation
Quick start guide
59821 - Red octopus clinging to Alvin manipulator arm.
Item
of 1
AssetActions
Feedback
Share via email
Share via email
Share via Facebook
Share via Twitter
Workflow
Red octopus clinging to Alvin manipulator arm.
This item is active and ready to use
Red octopus clinging to Alvin manipulator arm.
Red octopus clinging to Alvin manipulator arm.
Comments
(0)
Main
Digital original
Analog original
Scientific
Use of image
Version
iBase ID
59821
Creator
Strickrott, Bruce
Title
Red octopus clinging to Alvin manipulator arm.
Red octopus clinging to Alvin manipulator arm.
Type
Animation
Audio
File
Illustration
Instructional
Still Image
Video
Still Image
Date
05/31/2006
File name
octopus.jpg
Notes
Image taken from DSV Alvin while diving with Chuck Fisher in the Gulf of Mexico, in a brine lake at around 2300 meters. A female octopus, which may be the deepest example of that particular species. Image of The Day caption: "Most octopuses will let you get close, maybe even touch them, but normally they'll try to run once the manipulator gets close," said Alvin pilot Bruce Strickrott, of his encounter with a deep-sea octopus 2,300 meters down (about 7,500 feet) in the Gulf of Mexico. This female was docile and, instead of swimming away, grabbed the submersible's robotic manipulator arm, used for picking up samples of seafloor rocks and organisms. Caption from Oceanus magazine, Vol. 51, No. 1, pg. 66: Close encounters with Alvin. A big red octopus grabbed onto Alvins arm at 7,500 feet deep and was discovered to be a new species (Benthoctopus sp.). Image taken from DSV Alvin while diving with Chuck Fisher in the Gulf of Mexico, in a brine lake at around 2300 meters. A female octopus, which may be the deepest example of that particular species. Caption from Oceanus magazine, Vol. 45, No. 3, back cover: AN EIGHT-TENTACLED HUG— “Most octopuses will let you get close, maybe even touch them, but normally they’ll try to run once the manipulator gets close,” said Alvin pilot Bruce Strickrott. Instead of swimming away, this female octopus grabbed the submersible’s robotic manipulator arm, used for picking up samples of seafloor rocks and organisms. Strickrott and Penn State biologist Chuck Fisher encountered the octopus 7,500 feet (2,300 meters) down in the Gulf of Mexico in May 2006 and collected it for Janet Voight to study. Voight, an octopus specialist and curator at Chicago’s Field Museum of Natural History, said the animal may have become disoriented and thus acted docile after her paperthin skin absorbed sulfide and other chemical-laced fluids leaking from seafloor cracks, called cold seeps. In addition to the invertebrate’s large size, the octopus’s bright orange color is unusual among octopuses living at depths below a half mile (800 meters), Voight said. “Normally they are kind of purple.”
Image taken from DSV Alvin while diving with Chuck Fisher in the Gulf of Mexico, in a brine lake at around 2300 meters. A female octopus, which may be the deepest example of that particular species.
Image of The Day caption:
"Most octopuses will let you get close, maybe even touch them, but normally they'll try to run once the manipulator gets close," said Alvin pilot Bruce Strickrott, of his encounter with a deep-sea octopus 2,300 meters down (about 7,500 feet) in the Gulf of Mexico. This female was docile and, instead of swimming away, grabbed the submersible's robotic manipulator arm, used for picking up samples of seafloor rocks and organisms.
Caption from Oceanus magazine, Vol. 51, No. 1, pg. 66:
Close encounters with Alvin.
A big red octopus grabbed onto Alvins arm at 7,500 feet deep and was discovered to be a new species (Benthoctopus sp.).
Image taken from DSV Alvin while diving with Chuck Fisher in the Gulf of Mexico, in a brine lake at around 2300 meters. A female octopus, which may be the deepest example of that particular species.
Caption from Oceanus magazine, Vol. 45, No. 3, back cover:
AN EIGHT-TENTACLED HUG— “Most octopuses will let you get close, maybe even touch them, but normally they’ll try to run once the manipulator gets close,” said Alvin pilot Bruce Strickrott. Instead of swimming away, this female octopus grabbed the submersible’s robotic manipulator arm, used for picking up samples of seafloor rocks and organisms. Strickrott and Penn State biologist Chuck Fisher encountered the octopus 7,500 feet (2,300 meters) down in the Gulf of Mexico in May 2006 and collected it for Janet Voight to study. Voight, an octopus specialist and curator at Chicago’s Field Museum of Natural History, said the animal may have become disoriented and thus acted docile after her paperthin skin absorbed sulfide and other chemical-laced fluids leaking from seafloor cracks, called cold seeps. In addition to the invertebrate’s large size, the octopus’s bright orange color is unusual among octopuses living at depths below a half mile (800 meters), Voight said. “Normally they are kind of purple.”
Credit line
© Shane Gross/Greenpeace
© Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Adinah Barnett
Adobe Farmhouse Photography
Alamy Stock Photo
Courtesy of National Aeronautics and Space Administration
Getty Images/iStockphoto
Illustration by Eric S. Taylor, WHOI Creative
Illustration by Jack Cook
Illustration by Jayne Doucette
Illustration by Natalie Renier, WHOI Creative
Marine Imaging Technologies, LLC © Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Photo by Amy Apprill
Photo by Craig LaPlante
Photo by Daniel Hentz
Photo by Danielle Fino
Photo by Darlene Trew Crist
Photo by Elise Hugus
Photo by Hannah Piecuch
Photo by Jayne Doucette
Photo by Katherine Spencer Joyce
Photo by Ken Kostel
Photo by Marley L. Parker
Photo by Matthew Barton
Photo by ML Parker
Photo by Rachel Mann
Photo by Rebecca Travis
Photo by Sean Patrick Whelan
Photo by Tina Thomas
Photo by Tom Kleindinst
Photo by Véronique LaCapra
Photo courtesy of Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution Archives
Photographie : @alexis.rosenfeld
ROV SuBastian / Schmidt Ocean In
Video by Craig LaPlante
Video by Danielle Fino
Video by Hannah Piecuch
Video by Jayne Doucette
Video by Ken Kostel
Video by Matthew Barton
WHOI Creative © Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
-- Other --
Image courtesy of Expedition to the Deep Slope 2006, NOAA-OE
Copyright statement
© Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego
© 2021 Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, all rights reserved
© 2023 Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, all rights reserved
© Alexis Rosenfeld
© Bearwalk Cinema
© C. A. Linder
© Cape Cod Times
© Consortium for Ocean Leadership
© Daniel P. Zitterbart
© Figure 8 Studio
© Luis Lamar
© Mote Marine Laboratory
© National Aeronautics and Space Administration
© National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
© Shane Gross/Greenpeace
© Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
2012 Backyard Productions LLC
2018 - The Boston Globe
ADOBE FARMHOUSE PHOTOGRAPHY2023
Alan Chung © 2022
Alfred-Wegener-Institut / Michael Gutsche (CC-BY 4.0)
Amy Van Cise/www.cascadiaresearch.org
Art Wager
Aurora Lampson
Austin Greene Photography
Avatar Alliance Foundation
bjoernkils@gmail.com +1.732.586.7394 www.NewYorkMediaBoat.com
CC BY-SA Troy Sankey
Commonwealth of Australia (GBRMPA)
Copyright (c) 2012 Vanderhaegen Bart
Copyright © 2010 David M. Lawrence
Copyright 2002
Copyright 2007 Jeff Yonover
Copyright 2019 to Nick Valentine
Copyright Jim Stringer
Copyright,
Copyright: Jenouvrier - WHOI
Copyright: Peter Kimball
Credit: Universal Images Group North America LLC / Alamy Stock Photo
Croy Carlin
Dee Sullivan
Franz Mahr
FtLaudGirl
Hasselblad H6D
Henley Spiers
Image courtesy of NOAA Ocean Exploration, Deep Connections 2019.
Jeff Yonover 2015
Lewis Burnett
Luis Lamar
Marley Parker/WHOI
Martin Schiller http://martin-schiller.de
MINFIN PHOTOGRAPHY
Moorefam
NautilusLive/Ocean Exploration Trust
Paul Caiger
Photo by Chris Linder, WHOI
Rachael Talibart 2016
Robert E. Todd
roger fishman 2019
SP Whelan
thexfilephoto
Thomas A D Slager
Tom Shlesinger
UnderCurrent Productions
Unless otherwise noted (copyrighted material for example), information presented on this World Wide Web site is considered publi
WHOI
WHOI 2005
WHOI/ML Parker
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution.
www.joshuaqualls.com
-- Other --
© Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Other restrictions
Provenance
URL
Orientation
Landscape
Resolution (DPI)
72
File name
octopus.jpg
File type
Image
File extension
JPEG
File size
4.22MB
Height
1704px
Width
2272px
Uploaded by
jdoucette@whoi.edu
Uploaded on
2019-06-26 18:08:53
Views
1726
Analog file name
Analog source type
Analog source notes
Archives location
Analog negative number
Latitude
Longitude
Time (hh:mm:ss)
Depth
Altitude
Heading
Pitch
Roll
Licensing information
Legacy usage
jdoucette: for Ben Wallace akbrown: twitter akbrown: for instagram jdoucette: for WHOI marketing by Mascola jdoucette: for Women in Deep Waters slideshow kkostel: Consideration for Sosik TED talk etaylor: Oceanus magazine, Vol. 51, No. 1, pg. 66 dpandya: for member page kjoyce: lk;j mringham: High school outreach jcanavan: Oceanus magazine, Vol. 45, No. 3, back cover jfredericks: Research As Art - 2016 ESIP Summer Meeting aearly: Various eblasts
jdoucette: for Ben Wallace
akbrown: twitter
akbrown: for instagram
jdoucette: for WHOI marketing by Mascola
jdoucette: for Women in Deep Waters slideshow
kkostel: Consideration for Sosik TED talk
etaylor: Oceanus magazine, Vol. 51, No. 1, pg. 66
dpandya: for member page
kjoyce: lk;j
mringham: High school outreach
jcanavan: Oceanus magazine, Vol. 45, No. 3, back cover
jfredericks: Research As Art - 2016 ESIP Summer Meeting
aearly: Various eblasts
Version
Labels
Subjects
Biology
>
Eukaryotes
>
Animalia
>
Mollusca
>
Cephalopoda
>
Coleoidea
>
Octopoda
>
Octopus
remove
Vehicles
>
DSV Alvin - original Alvin - DSV-1
remove
Assign subject
Remove all subjects
This item includes these files
Image
Collections
Selections
0
Open full page
Clear all
Search within
By field
By subject
By location
By folder / collection
By recent searches
Print
Export data
Collection
Edit
Lock
Workflow