English, asked by anooplamba283, 5 months ago

passage on attack is the best deffence​

Answers

Answered by mkaur14
2

Answer: Some people say that the best defense is a good offense; an octopus, however, would disagree.

In addition to being one of the strangest and most beautiful creatures in nature, the octopus has some of

the most inventive and effective defense mechanisms imaginable. While other animals have teeth, horns,

or claws to help defend them from predators, the octopus concentrates its energy on hiding from and

confusing its attackers. When it wants to get away, the octopus has an impressive arsenal of tricks at its

disposal.

The most well-known of the octopus’s defense mechanisms is its ability to squirt clouds of ink into

the water. Some octopi use this cloud of ink as camouflage; after squirting the ink, the octopus retreats

into the ink cloud where the predator cannot see it. Other octopi use the ink cloud as a decoy. If a large,

intelligent predator such as a shark knows that octopi use ink clouds for camouflage, it might simply

attack the ink cloud blindly, hoping to make contact with the octopus inside. However, some sneaky

octopi will release the ink cloud in one direction and scurry away in another direction, leaving the predator

with nothing but a mouthful of ink. In addition to confusing predators’ sense of sight, these ink clouds also

confuse their sense of smell. The ink is composed primarily of melanin (the same chemical that gives

human skin its color), which can shut down a predator’s sense of smell. If an octopus cannot be seen or

smelled, it has a much higher chance of escaping an attack.

Another defense mechanism possessed by many octopi is the ability to change color, much like a

chameleon. Most animals get their skin color from chemicals in the skin called chromatophores (melanin

is one of these chromatophores). Chromatophores might contain yellow, orange, red, brown, or black

pigments, and the amount of each pigment present in the skin determines an animal’s color. While most

animals are always the same color, some species of octopi can control the amount of each color pigment

in their skin cells, allowing them to change color. Some poisonous octopi, when provoked, will change

their skin to a bright, eye-catching color to warn predators that they are dangerous and ready to strike.

Other octopi use this ability to change their skin to the color and texture of seaweed or coral, allowing

them to blend in with their environment. Finally, some octopi—such as the mimic octopus—use this color-changing ability to masquerade as another type of animal. The body of an octopus is highly flexible, and

some species can combine this flexibility with their color-changing skills to make themselves resemble

more dangerous animals such as sea snakes or eels.

Yet another defense mechanism possessed by some octopi is the ability to perform an autotomy,

or self-amputation, of one of their limbs and regrow it later. Many species of skink and lizard also possess

this ability, which allows them to shed their tails when caught by a predator and therefore getaway. When

a predator catches a tentacle the octopus can amputate this tentacle, thereby unfettering itself, and

regrow the tentacle later. Some octopi, however, are even cleverer. When threatened by a predator,

these octopi will shed a tentacle before being attacked in the hope that the predator will go after the

detached tentacle rather than the octopus itself.

While the octopus may not be the most vicious creature in the ocean, its numerous and clever

defense mechanisms help it to survive in the dangerous undersea world.

Explanation: hope this helps!! : )

Answered by surajshidore
0

Answer:

the passage is most likely an excerpt from

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