Tuesday, 31 March 2009

octopus story and half shark story

one bright morning in a beautiful ocean there lived an octopus the octopus was near an shark and the octopus was changed couler so the shark couldn't see the octopus then the shark left. Then really slowly and really quiet and the octopus swam up and gabbed the shark then all that was left was the octopus because the shark was eaten by the octopus SUDDENLY THERE WAS A NET!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!THEN THE NET GRABBED THE OCTOPUS AND SWAM UP WITH THE OCTOPUS. Then there was no octopus left in the ocean because that was the last octopus in the ocean and there was 1 shark in the ocean then next morning the octopus was swimming around and looking for fish and he found some fishes and when the fishes were not looking the shark eat them as fast as it could . Next the fishes thought that whenever they see the shark they will hide in a good spot that were the shark would not find them and the next day 10 of the fishes saw the shark and they did what they thought and they found a very good hiding spot and then the shark couldn't see them and left.Then there was ANOTHER NET!!!and all the fishes hoped that the shark would get catched and there dream came true the shark did get caught!. Then the ocean was nothing but fishes and all other stuff that aren't bad and now they can do anything and olso the best part was they wont get eaten. the end
The octopus (pronounced /ˈɒktəpəs/, from Greek ὀκτάπους (oktapous), "eight-footed",[1][2] with plural forms: octopuses [ˈɒktəpʊsɪz], octopi [ˈɒktəpaɪ], or octopodes [ˌɒkˈtəʊpədiːz], see below) is a cephalopod of the order Octopoda that inhabits many diverse regions of the ocean, especially coral reefs. The term may also refer to only those creatures in the genus Octopus. In the larger sense, there are around 300 recognized octopus species, which is over one-third of the total number of known cephalopod species.

An octopus has eight flexible arms, which trail behind it as it swims. Most octopuses have no internal or external skeleton, allowing them to squeeze through tight places. An octopus has a hard beak, with its mouth at the center point of the arms. Octopuses are highly intelligent, probably the most intelligent invertebrates. They are known to build "forts" and "traps" in the wild, and for rearranging tanks and burying other animals alive in domestication[citation needed]. For this reason, they are quite notorious among aquarium operators.[3] For defense against predators, they hide, flee quickly, expel ink, or use color-changing camouflage. Octopuses are bilaterally symmetrical, like other cephalopods, with two eyes and four pairs of arms.
octopuses come fome seas they use there coulers to change coulers and they olso hide in a cave.

Tuesday, 17 March 2009

i have thought from evry now and on i will collect more information befor i go on my blog i have chosen this because i have not got as more comments and so that my blog will be intresting.