31. Scallop - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bottletail
Octopus
Common
Atlantic White-spotted
Big Blue
Pacific Giant
Southern Red
AmphiOctopus fangsiao
Squid
New Zealand Arrow
Japanese Flying
Humboldt
Neon flying
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scallop - 120.0kb
32. Bipedalism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
though at least two types of octopus walk bipedally on the sea floor using two of their arms, allowing the remaining arms to be used to camouflage the octopus as a mat of algae or a floating coconut. [ 13 ]
[edit ] Advantages
Limited and
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biped - 145.2kb
33. Oyster - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bottletail
Octopus
Common
Atlantic White-spotted
Big Blue
Pacific Giant
Southern Red
AmphiOctopus fangsiao
Squid
New Zealand Arrow
Japanese Flying
Humboldt
Neon flying
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oyster - 165.7kb
34. Abalone - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bottletail
Octopus
Common
Atlantic White-spotted
Big Blue
Pacific Giant
Southern Red
AmphiOctopus fangsiao
Squid
New Zealand Arrow
Japanese Flying
Humboldt
Neon flying
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abalone - 170.8kb
35. Cuttlefish - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
have ink, like squid and octopuses, which they use to help evade predators.[ citation needed ] This ink is stored inside an ink sac .
[edit ] Toxicity
Like octopuses and some squid, all cuttlefish have bacterially-produced neurotoxins
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cuttlefish - 92.9kb
36. Pain in invertebrates - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
. [ 13 ]
The octopus octopus marginatus
Two groups of invertebrates have notably complex brains: arthropods (insects , crustaceans , arachnids , and others) and modern cephalopods (octopuses , squid , cuttlefish ) and
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pain_in_invertebrates - 133.9kb