What happens when an octopus jumps on a shark for a ride around the city?
A “sharktopus,” of course.
The rare vision, the video was captured on the coast of New Zealand and shared by scientists associated with the University of Auckland, a Maori octopus riding on top of a Mao shark, the fastest in the world with the ability to swim up to 46 miles per hour in the world.
The university said the December 2023 encounter “was one of the most strange things of Marine scientists from Auckland. [favor] deep. ,
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A rare vision occupied by the coast of New Zealand and a Maori octopus shared by scientists from the University of Auckland is shown riding on top of a MCO Shark, the fastest in the world with the ability to swim up to 46 miles per hour. (University of Auckland)
Researchers at the university were searching for sharks feeding sharks in Hauraki Bay near Kavau Island, when a MCO shark was discovered with “orange patch” on its head.
Researchers launched a drone and installed a gopro camera in water and “looked some unforgettable: an octopus sat on the shark head, sticking with his tent, sticking with his tent,” Auckland’s professor Roshel Constantine wrote. ” A piece for university Last week.
Researchers launched a drone and installed a gopro camera in the water and “looked somewhat unforgettable: an octopus clung to his tent over the shark’s head,” Auckland University Professor Rochelle Constantine wrote a piece for the university last week. (University of Auckland)
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Constantine said that the researchers left after 10 minutes, so they were not sure what happened to the next “sharktopus”, but “octopus could be quite experience, as the world’s fastest shark species can reach [30 mph],
“First, I was so, ‘Is this an aunt?” Constantine told The New York Times this week. “Is it entangled in fishing gear or was there a big cut?” ,
Researchers stated that octopus was for “considerable experience” with the world’s fastest sharks. (University of Auckland)
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He said, “You can see that it takes a reasonable amount of real estate on the head of the shark,” given that neither the animal was troubled by the encounter.
“The shark looked quite happy, and the octopus looked quite happy. It was a very cool scene,” he said.