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News / Nation & World

So long, suckers! Octopus makes an amazing escape

Inky bolts from his tank and shimmies through pipe to ocean

By NICK PERRY, Associated Press
Published: April 15, 2016, 11:31pm
2 Photos
This undated image provided by The National Aquarium of New Zealand shows Inky the octopus swimming in a tank at the National Aquarium of New Zealand in Napier, New Zealand.  Inky the octopus escaped the National Aquarium of New Zealand for the Pacific Ocean.
This undated image provided by The National Aquarium of New Zealand shows Inky the octopus swimming in a tank at the National Aquarium of New Zealand in Napier, New Zealand. Inky the octopus escaped the National Aquarium of New Zealand for the Pacific Ocean. (The National Aquarium of New Zealand via AP) (National Aquarium of New Zealand) Photo Gallery

WELLINGTON, New Zealand — Inky the octopus waited until it was dark and the staff had gone home from the National Aquarium of New Zealand before making his move.

He squeezed and pushed his way through a tiny gap in the mesh at the top of his tank and slithered 6.6 feet to the floor. Then he made a beeline across the room to a drain hole.

With a body the size of a rugby ball, Inky managed to stretch out and squeeze into the hole. From there, he shimmied down the 164-foot pipe until he was back in the Pacific Ocean.

All he left behind three months ago was a slimy trail, allowing staff at the Napier aquarium to re-create his amazing escape.

He’s not been seen since.

Inky’s story begins on Pania Reef, several hundred yards out to sea from the aquarium. He was pulled up by a fisherman in a lobster pot and wasn’t in good shape. He’d been attacked, probably by a snapper or some other fish, and a couple of his tentacles were half their normal length.

After a year recuperating at the National Aquarium, said manager Rob Yarrall, Inky was once again in good health. And he’d been delighting the staff with his intelligence.

“He used to come up and you could hand-feed him,” Yarrall said. “He’d grab hold of you with the suckers on his tentacles, or squirt water at you. And he worked out how to screw the top off a jar.”

Yarrall said that since they have no bones, octopuses can squeeze through almost any hole that’s larger than their beaks, so the drain hole, 6 inches wide, was no great challenge.

After Inky escaped, the aquarium staff figured out what happened, admired his cleverness, wished him well and went back to work. No one thought to publicize the story until Robyn McLean, communications manager for the Napier City Council, heard about what happened this week. She told a local reporter, and before long she and her small staff had fielded more than 100 calls from international media.

“It shows how we should never take animals for granted,” McLean said. “The humble octopus is a very, very intelligent creature. He thought this one out and he nailed it. So, go Inky.”

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