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PZ Myers is a biologist and associate professor at the University of Minnesota, Morris.
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« Salt of the earth | Main | Tom Bethell cries »

The one true king of the cephalopodians

Category: CephalopodsScience
Posted on: February 19, 2008 1:22 AM, by PZ Myers

Oh, joy! Carl Zimmer has published a profile of Roger Hanlon, the well-known cephalopod expert, and he is specifically discussing the work on camouflage that I previously summarized. I've also cited his work on sexual mimicry and nuptial dances — this is a fellow whose work all true worshipers of the cephalopod should be following.

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Comments

#1

Here's the YouTube video on him too:
http://youtube.com/watch?v=2x-8v1mxpR0

Posted by: Alec T | February 19, 2008 1:32 AM

#2

Direct link to the Zimmer-Hanlon interview video (76MB):
http://downloads.feedroom.com/podcasts/nytimes/20080213/IPOD_2581_a1_wg_cuttlefish_eo_29Z8.m4v

Tentacular!

Posted by: Owlmirror | February 19, 2008 2:08 AM

#3

Blasphemy! I came to this website for atheistic musings! Now we have actual science?!!?! I am going to have to active corners of my brain I have not used in months. (Not sure if previous comment was meant to be sarcastic or grateful)

Posted by: JakeS | February 19, 2008 3:48 AM

#4

I have seen cuttlefish (no, not that Cuttlefish) doing nuptial dances in the wild and in the process flashing all colors of the rainbow. Reading that these masters of color are actually color blind is truly mind blowing. As someone who has dabbled in black and white photography and computer graphics I'm aware that high resolution finely graded shades of grey can convey extremley nuanced surface information. However I can't quite imagine how a truly color blind creature can so perfectly blend in with colored backgrounds. Is there a theory as to what is going on here?

Posted by: Fernando Magyar | February 19, 2008 6:40 AM

#5

Here's the video to link to, if possible.

Posted by: Erik | February 19, 2008 7:25 AM

#6

A thought:

Although cuttlefish (no, not Cuttlefish) are colorblind, there is evidence that they can detect, and flash in, polarized light.

And while this may not explain the flashing of color, on the other hand it might.

When humans study cuttlefish (no, not Cuttlefish), they do so with the biases inherent in possessing trichromatic eyes.

So it is no surprise,

That humans see a color deficit instead of a polarization plus

When comparing "them" to "us".

It could be that color is an artifact, and not what the cuttlefish (not, not Cuttlefish) perceives at all;

He just sees a lady cuttlefish and answer's nature's call.

Of course, this Cuttlefish (no, not cuttlefish) is not an expert, so everything I am saying about cephalopod communication and the beautiful danse nuptial

Is merely concuptial.

DC

Posted by: Cuttlefish, OM | February 19, 2008 7:27 AM

#7

Excellent article, well suited -- and as for the poetry by DC in #6 -- very well done!

Posted by: PeteB | February 19, 2008 3:53 PM

#8

It seems that I must reassess the way I thought of Color.
For being trichromatic I thought polarized light duller.
But now that my perception has so greatly been enhanced.
I've a greater admiration for how a cuttlefish's romanced.

Posted by: Fernando Magyar | February 19, 2008 9:48 PM

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