11:57

каждый да будет весел и добр до часа кончины
...As it turns out, the red octopus isn’t normally part of the Shale Reef exhibit, which is open on top so that visitors can look down onto an array of colorful invertebrates with the help of large, floating magnifiers.
Our husbandry staff believes the octopus hitchhiked into the Aquarium as a tiny, fingernail-size juvenile, attached to a rock or sponge. Once inside the exhibit, the reclusive, nocturnal octopus hid among the rocks, growing to its current size undetected. Based on the octopus’s size, our aquarists think it has been there—presiding over its own, secret octopus’s garden—for close to a year!
“We’d noticed that there weren’t as many crabs coming out at feeding time in that exhibit,” said Senior Aquarist Barbara Utter. “Now we realize that’s where they’d all been going—into the octopus’s tummy!”

Monterey Bay Aquarium

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14.11.2016 в 23:32

Скрипач не нужен.
ААААА!!!
“We’d noticed that there weren’t as many crabs coming out at feeding time in that exhibit”
И действительно, почему же?
Прошёл год, меня всё ещё не раскрыли. (с)
17.11.2016 в 13:35

каждый да будет весел и добр до часа кончины
Cordy Laer, у меня еще где-то был пост про огромного червя, который так же попал в аквариум и ЖРАЛ и РОС, ща найду))
www.youtube.com/watch?v=z-JWkiIozGI

I was breaking down the tank (as I was moving it), hence it looking shoddy. That unice was in there 2 years before I noticed, and only noticed because I had whole coral colonies missing after a single evening. I first saw it after I spent a few nights sat up (after lights went out) for about 3 hours per night looking for the critter who was eating my corals. Even when I knew it was there, I only ever saw it 3 times within the space of a year. It hides in the rocks, and only comes out at night, impossible to catch without taking everything out the tank.

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