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Scientists capture rare sighting of octopus riding shark on camera

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What happens when an octopus jumps onto a shark and rides around town?

Of course, “Sharktopus.”

A rare sighting, filmed on video off the coast of New Zealand and shared by scientists at the University of Auckland, shows a Māori octopus riding on a macaw shark.

The university met in December 2023, “Oakland's University of Marine Scientists has ever seen. It was certainly a mystical sight… Most of the octopus are located on the seabed, but the short fin maco sharks don't [favor] deep. ”

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A rare sighting shared by scientists captured off the coast of New Zealand and belonging to the University of Auckland shows a Māori octopus riding on a macaw shark. (Auckland University)

University researchers were searching for a shark feeding a frenzy in Hauraki Bay near Gulf, near the Gulf Bay, near the Owau Island, when a mako shark was discovered with an “orange patch” on its head.

Researchers fired a drone, put GoPro cameras in the water and “we saw something we never forgot. An octopus was sitting on a shark's head, clinging to tentacles,” wrote Professor Rochelle Constantine of Auckland University. University works last week.

Sharktopus from above

Researchers fired a drone, put GoPro cameras in the water, and “we saw something that we never forgot. The octopus sat on a shark's head and stuck to tentacles,” wrote Professor Rochelle Constantine of Auckland in a university work last week. (Auckland University)

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Constantine added that the researchers moved 10 minutes later, so he didn't know what happened to “Sharktopus” next, but “octopus may have had quite a bit of experience.” [30 mph]. ”

“In the beginning it was like, 'Is that a buoy?',” Constantine told the New York Times this week. “Are you caught up in fishing gear or was it a big bite?”

Side view of Sharktopus

Researchers said the octopus was due to “substantial experience” with the world's fastest shark. (Auckland University)

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She noted that “it turns out that we need a significant amount of real estate on the shark's head,” and that neither animal appears to be plagued by the encounter.

“The shark looked very happy and the octopus looked very happy. It was a very calm scene,” she said.

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