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Divers conduct census for octopuses

Seattle Aquarium oversees Puget Sound effort

The Columbian
Published: February 5, 2015, 4:00pm

PUGET SOUND — To check on the health of the giant pacific octopus population in the Puget Sound, an unusual census takes place every year. Volunteer divers, enlisted by the Seattle Aquarium, span over Washington’s inland waters and look for their eight-tentacle neighbors.

• THE BIGGEST IN THE WORLD: Weighing as much as 150 pounds with tentacles that can span up to 20 feet, the giant pacific octopus lives up to its name. It’s the biggest octopus in the world and it calls the waters off Seattle home, part of its vast range over the Pacific Ocean.

“The Puget Sound offers good habitat, water temperature and an abundant food source for them,” said Kathryn Kegel, a Seattle Aquarium biologist.

Known as one of the smartest creatures in the oceans, the giant pacific octopus leads a relatively short life, between three and five years. They are terminal maters, meaning once they mate, they die soon after.

“They are big hunters of crab, clams, scallops, things like that,” Kegel said.

Because the giant pacific octopus is not on federal endangered or threatened species lists, there aren’t current studies on the population in the Puget Sound. In fact, it’s unknown how many live in here, Kegel said.

That’s where the Seattle Aquarium and its troops of volunteer divers step in.

• AN INFORMAL BUT INFORMATIVE CENSUS: From the waters off Seattle to the maritime border with Canada, 27 divers looked for the giant pacific octopus, or G.P.O as it’s called, at 11 sites around the Puget Sound last month. The aquarium asked the divers to count how many octopuses they saw, note the depth of their finding as well as the type of hiding spot.

This year, the census counted 28 octopuses while the year before the divers found 17.

“We’ve been watching the numbers go up then kind of go down, then kind of go back up. That could be having to do with population and mating. As they all peak and mate, they slowly die off, then they start to grow back up again,” Kegel said.

The volunteer nature of the census means the count is not rigidly scientific, Kegel said.

Two years ago, after a diver killed an octopus, state wildlife officials changed the rules to carve out protected habitat for octopuses. They used the data from the census as well as information from dive community.

• DIVING COMMUNITY: The Puget Sound hosts a healthy scuba diving community and the giant pacific octopus is one of the main attractions, even though the water is cold and dark.

“It’s always a night dive in the Puget Sound,” half-joked volunteer diver Carl Harrington, who has been diving for 15 years here.

Harrington didn’t see an octopus during his census dive, but he did see plenty of other creatures, including a ratfish (a relative of the shark), sculpins and others.

“Diving here, it’s just amazing how much life there is here just teeming underneath the ocean,” Harrington said, adding one of the rare sights for divers is the massive bottom-dwelling six-gill shark that sometimes makes a trip to the shallows.

Octopuses themselves can be challenging to spot. They are nocturnal and hide in their dens during the day. The divers use flashlights and dive in areas historically known for being octopus homes.

While Harrington was unlucky, other divers in his party spotted octopuses.

“They were hiding in their holes sleeping. They had been eating because there were shells all around them,” said volunteer diver Kathryn Arant.

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