OCTOPUSES can be trained to do many things, but this one may be getting too much credit.
Sun (men (animal behaviorist
Mark Vette
trains animals
for film and television)) trine Pholus (food and drink
(used food rewards to teach the octopus to press
the camera's shutter in response to a buzzer) conjunct Pelion (merits, medals and certificates (photograph visitors)). Venus (adaptation) conjunct Asbolus (extreme sense of smell).
What’s got eight arms, shoots pictures underwater, and lives in New
Zealand? Answer: Rambo, a female octopus in a New Zealand aquarium that
trainers have taught to photograph visitors using a waterproof digital
camera mounted to the side of her tank. A Sony video that went viral
this week shows fans eagerly posing for her.
Animal behaviorist
Mark Vette, with Animals on Q—a New Zealand company that trains animals
for film and television—used food rewards to teach the octopus to press
the camera’s shutter in response to a buzzer. She picked up the task
fairly quickly, he says, but in living up to her action-star-name, Rambo
also destroyed two cameras. (Watch a sneaky octopus take apart a
camera.)
Vette spent about six to eight weeks training Rambo. The
hardest part was building a camera case tough enough to withstand the
curious creature. “We went through a dozen iterations,” he says.
Teaching
her to associate the buzzer with a food reward was easier; that only
took three tries, Vette says. He was then able to teach Rambo that the
buzzer meant she had to take a picture before she could be fed.
When
octopuses touch something, they’re usually looking to see if they can
take it apart to find something to eat inside, explains Rich Ross, an
aquarium biologist with the California Academy of Sciences in San
Francisco. “They’re very food motivated.”
They’re also very
curious. If the Academy staff don’t give the octopuses in their care
toys to play with or enrichment activities, they get bored, he says. And
bored octopuses will find things to do on their own—like pull apart
their aquarium.
National Geographic photographer Brian Skerry has
the greatest respect for octopus intelligence. “You’re in a game of wits
when photographing them,” he says, because the animals can change their
skin color and texture and squeeze into tiny spaces.
“I always
find myself laughing when I work with them,” he says, because “they’re a
handful.” (See pictures of these masters of disguise.)
Neither Skerry nor Ross were surprised that Rambo learned to take pictures.
The
Kelly Tarlton Sea Life Aquarium in Auckland, New Zealand is selling
their octopus’s photographs to visitors for about $1.50 (U.S.). The
proceeds will go towards aquarium operations and programs.
Some of
the animal’s work is up on Sony New Zealand’s Facebook page. The
portraits are fairly standard, although in a few, Rambo couldn’t seem to
get one of her tentacles out of the way.
“That happens with the best of us,” says Skerry.
Minor planet keywords developed by Philip Sedgwick, used with permission http://philipsedgwick.com/
Source: National Geographic
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