Making the most of what is lying around (Image: Roger Steene)





Video: Octopus tool use

Octopuses have been observed carrying coconut shells in what researchers claim is the first recorded example of tool use in invertebrates.

There is a growing record of tool use in animals and birds, from musical “instruments” made by orang-utans to sponges used by dolphins to dislodge prey from sand.


Now veined octopuses, Amphioctopus marginatus, have been filmed picking up coconut halves from the seabed to use as hiding places when they feel threatened.

“This octopus behaviour was totally unexpected,” says Julian Finn, a marine biologist at Museum Victoria in Melbourne, Australia, who has filmed at least four individual veined octopuses performing the trick off the coast of Indonesia.

Discarded coconuts

People living in Indonesian coastal villages discard coconut shells into the sea after use. When the octopuses come across these on the seabed, they drape their bodies over and around the shells, hollow-side up, leaving their eight arms dangling over the edges.

The octopuses then lift the shells by making their arms rigid, before tiptoeing away in a manoeuvre Finn calls stilt-walking.

When the octopuses feel threatened, they flip the half shells over themselves and hide. Some even use two shells to create a more spacious shelter with an opening through which they can keep a lookout.

“It was a very comical sight,” says Finn. He believes octopuses have known for millennia how to perform similar tricks with unoccupied bivalve shells, but have only recently discovered that coconut halves are a light and convenient alternative.

Tool use

Finn argues that the behaviour qualifies as tool use for a number of reasons. First, the shells are not permanent homes like those occupied by hermit crabs, but are carried around for future use.

It is also a costly behaviour, both in terms of energy use and in potentially making the octopuses more vulnerable to attack.

But there are uncertainties about whether the octopuses have learned this behaviour by observing others, or by working it out for themselves in each case.

“The finding is remarkable, particularly as the octopus transports the tool for future use,” says Christopher Bird of Imperial College London, who studies tool use in rooks. “But simply observing tool use in the wild doesn’t necessarily mean that the animal is cognitively sophisticated, as we don’t know how the behaviour developed.”

Cognitive demands

“The conventional definitions of tool use include the use of non-attached objects to act on other object(s), which may be food,” says Alex Kacelnik of the University of Oxford, whose team recently studied whether crows plan their tool use in advance.

“The use of a coconut shell for protection does not fit this definition, but I sympathise with the authors in that this does not imply that the cognitive demands for such an action are lower,” Kacelnik says. “The interesting issues are not whether this observation fits a pre-established definition, but what cognitive operations make the behaviour possible.”

Journal reference: Current Biology, vol 19, R1069