The New Zealand Herald

Locals stumped as octopuses crawl ashore

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More than two dozen octopuses have been spotted slogging along a shoreline in West Wales, worrying beachgoers, who spent time picking up the critters and plopping them back into the ocean.

Brett Stones, who runs SeaMor Dolphin Watching Boat Trips, said yesterday that he was finishing a tour on Friday night when he saw something moving on New Quay beach in Cardigan Bay. When he got closer, he saw that it was an octopus — and that many more were spread across the sand.

“It was a bit like an end-of-days scenario,” he told the BBC.

Stones said that he had never seen anything quite like it. “Seeing something like that out of its environmen­t, you get this sort of feeling of wanting to protect them,” he said. “They won’t survive out of the water,” he added, explaining that he and others gathered about 25 of the octopuses and put them back into the water to keep them alive.

Videos posted on SeaMor’s Facebook page show the pinkish sea creatures.

“We collected the ones that were totally out of the water, and plopped them back in at the end of the pier, hopefully saving them from getting stranded. If you’re around over the next few evenings, get in touch and we’ll let you know where to go,” the company wrote in the post.

On Saturday morning, the company posted pictures showing several octopuses on land that appeared to be dead, suspecting that they might be dying after spawning.

“They spawn in autumn, and some of them die after that. They don’t live very long apparently, 1-3 years!!” SeaMor wrote in the comments beneath the Facebook post. Other sightings were reported. Graham Pierce, a research scientist at Instituto de Investigac­iones Marinas in Vigo, Spain, said the beached animals are most likely curled octopuses, or Eledone cirrhosa, which he said are characteri­sed by a single row of suckers along the arms.

He said there could be several reasons that they moved on to the beach, including spawning, weather and water temperatur­es.

James Wright, curator at the National Marine Aquarium in the United Kingdom, said it was possible something could be wrong with them.

“As the areas where they are exhibiting this odd behaviour coincides with the two areas hit by the two recent lowpressur­e depression­s and associated storms of Ophelia and Brian, it could be supposed that these have affected them. It could simply be injuries sustained by the rough weather itself or there could be a sensitivit­y to a change in atmospheri­c pressure.”

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