A marine biologist discovered something incredible in a beer bottle on the seafloor
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This story was produced in collaboration with The Dodo.One morning this week, Hanna Koch was snorkeling in the Florida Keys when she came across a brown beer bottle on the sea floor. Koch, a marine biologist for Floridas Monroe County, picked up the bottle, planning to carry it with her and later toss it out. Through her dive mask, Koch peered inside to make sure it was empty. Thats when she saw an eyeball. There was something staring back at me, Koch told me. It wasnt just one eyeball, actually but dozens. Inside the bottle was an octopus mom with a brood of babies.You could see their eyes, you could see their tentacles, Koch said in a recent interview with Vox and The Dodo. They were fully formed.Instead of taking the bottle with her and throwing it away like she initially intended, Koch handed it to her colleague, another marine biologist, who carefully placed it back on the sandy sea floor. Based on the images and video, Chelsea Bennice, a marine biologist at Florida Atlantic University, said the animal was likely a species of pygmy octopus making this whole encounter even cuter. Courtesy of Hanna KochOn one hand, its hopeful to find life an octopus family! living in rubbish. One mans trash is another octopuses nursery, as University of Miami environmental scientist Jennifer Jacquet told me when I showed her the photos. Her graduate student, Janelle Kaz, said its actually not uncommon for octopuses to take up residence in beer bottles. They are highly curious and opportunistic, Jacquet said. But its also a reminder that, as Florida ecosystems decline, there are fewer and fewer places for wildlife to live. Overfishing, pollution, and climate change have devastated near-shore habitats in the Keys and especially coral reefs in the last few decades. Hanna KochThe irony, Koch told me, is that she runs a state-funded project in Monroe County to create artificial reefs: structures, often made of concrete, to enhance the habitat for fish, lobsters, and other sea creatures. And she was actually snorkeling that morning to figure out where to put some of the structures. This octopus found artificial habitat to make its home, Koch said. I was just like, Wait momma, because Im going to put out some better habitat for you something that someone cant pick up and throw away.See More:
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