Forty years ago, Jennifer Mather was diving off the coast of Bermuda in the Atlantic Ocean. She spotted a common octopus, a soccer ball-sized octopus found in oceans around the world. Mather watched it slink around the seafloor, using the suckers on its eight long arms to gather clams and snails. The octopus dragged the morsels of food to its den, cracked open the shells with its arms, and began eating.
When the octopus was finished, Mather watched it do something surprising. It scuttled out of the den and used one of its arms to pick up a rock. It brought the rock to its den, then left to grab another, then another. It lined the rocks up in a row so they formed a wall over the den opening. “That was my ‘aha’ moment,” remembers Mather. “Octopuses are smart!”
Today, Mather studies animal behavior at the University of Lethbridge in Canada. She designs experiments to investigate how octopuses think. Scientists consider octopuses some of the most intelligent invertebrates. Scientists like Mather want to better understand the animals’ remarkable abilities—and how those abilities help them survive.