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Example of a commentary post

This is an example of a commentary post (created using the Passle Button) including a quote from, and link to the article The mysterious inner life of the octopus.

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1.The octopus is a pretty clever animal, but with most of its brain cells actually in its “arms”Octopuses have a large nervous system, with the average octopus having about 500 million neurons or brain cells. That puts it in the same “brain range” as smaller mammals such as dogs. Unlike dogs, humans and others, most of the neurons are found in the arms of the octopus and not the brain – in fact nearly twice as many. Each sucker on an octopus’s arm may have 10,000 neurons to handle taste and touch.
   
2.Octopuses can be trained and have memory skills

Research from the mid-20th century showed that octopuses could be trained to perform simple tasks. In one particular experiment, a number of octopuses were able to pull a lever to get a reward – a piece of sardine.

Octopuses have also undergone visual tests, with simple tasks remembered first with one eye covered and then the other. It was a long process, but the octopus outperformed many other animals, including pigeons!

   
3.Don’t get on the wrong side of an octopus – they’re highly mischievous

In the lever experiment mentioned above, three octopuses were involved – they were named Albert, Bertram and Charles. Albert and Bertram were the most consistent performers while Charles was a bit wayward and broke the lever! If that wasn’t enough, Charles would also squirt jets of water at whoever was conducting the experiment that day!

Misbehaving octopuses have been reported in various aquariums, including ones which have learned to turn off the lights by squirting jets of water at the bulbs and short-circuiting the power supply. At the University of Otago in New Zealand, this became so expensive that an octopus had to be released back to the wild!

   
4.Octopuses recognise individual peopleIn the same lab in New Zealand that had the “lights-out” problem, an octopus took a dislike to one member of the lab staff, for no obvious reason. Whenever that person passed by, she received a jet of half a gallon of water to the back of her neck!
   
5.Octopuses like to playPerhaps hardly surprising, given their mischievous antics described above, they are playful creatures. Some octopuses in labs have been seen to spend time blowing pill bottles around their tank with their jet, bouncing the bottle back and forth on the stream of water coming from the tank’s intake valve.

 

 

It was a big night for Inky the octopus. The day's visitors had been and gone, and now his room in the aquarium was deserted. In a rare oversight, the lid of his tank had been left ajar. The common New Zealand octopus had been without female company for some time, sharing a tank with only a fellow male, Blotchy. The loose lid provided Inky with an opportunity.

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