Amphioctopus fangsiao
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''Amphioctopus fangsiao'', called webfoot octopus, is a species of octopus, a cephalopod belonging to the genus ''Amphioctopus''. It is found in the Pacific Ocean, including off the coasts of New Zealand as well as in the Yellow Sea and surrounding Chinese shores. It is also Commercial fishing, commercially fished. Individuals of ''A. fangsiao'' that share genetic similarities by region are distributed throughout the Yellow Sea by size. They can also be infected by parasites in genus ''Aggregata'' and ''Octopicola.''


Distribution

This species occurs in the Philippine Sea, the northwest Pacific and off the coast of Japan (Osaka Bay). The lifespan of this species is approximately a year, typically spawning in the spring and growing linearly after spawning. In Haizhou Bay in the Yellow Sea, smaller individuals of ''A. fangsiao'' tend to be found closer to the shore in the spring and even closer during the summer, while larger individuals tend to be distributed further away from the shore. File:Octopus ocellatus (suckers).jpg, Closeup of suckers File:Ocellated octopus.jpg, Hiding in shell


Embryonic development

''A. fangsiao'' holds an embryonic temperature threshold in which growth accelerates at . In three days after gestation the octopus is typically still Gastrulation, gastrulating. On day 5, the embryo completes their first Inversion (evolutionary biology), inversion and between days 15–21 after gestation, the octopus embryo exhibit chromatophores and black eyes. The embryos complete their second inversion between days 25–31. Octopus embryos develop logarithmically faster with increase in temperature; those embryos who develop at a temperature of go through 0.83 embryonic stages per day on average while embryos that develop at a temperature between go through 0.67 Embryonic development, embryonic stages per day on average. The octopuses that had a smaller embryo but larger yolk volume tended to hatch at .


Abnormal morphologies

The embryos that grew at were not able to hatch due to accelerated growth which caused eggs to be more swollen than eggs developing at lower temperatures; this accelerated growth caused the chorion to break and the embryo to hatch prematurely. While the eggs grown at were ovular in shape as normal, the eggs grown at were malformed. The embryos grown in conditions also exhibited red eyes at 2 days after gestation.


Diseases affecting ''A. fangsiao''

Like many other species of cephalopods, ''A. fangsiao'' is not safe from infection. As of 2021, there is not much information on the Protozoan infection, protozoan parasites that infect this species among other species of cephalopods native to the Pacific Ocean. It is known that is that these parasites belong to the genus ''Aggregata'' and are responsible for the infections that have led to the death of many ''A. fangsiao'' in a culture facility in China. Infection in ''A. fangsiao'' was also found from the genus ''Octopicola''.


''Aggregata'' infection

Evidence of the parasite's infection on the ''A. fangsiao'' specimens include numerous white cysts scattered throughout the body of each octopus. These cysts, called sporocysts, are smooth to the touch, measuring 17.69–20.72 μm by 15.97–20.00 μm. While the oocysts themselves are circular in shape measuring 249.75–501.75 μm and 116.84–350.87 μm in size. Oocysts represent one of the stages in their lifecycle. When Histology, histological surveys were done, the cysts had severely affected the integrity of the internal organs, and often the intestinal issue was greatly affected by oocysts filled with sporocysts. Out of the 220 octopuses collected at the site, 95 of them were infected with ''Aggregata''—representing 43% of the investigated specimens in the facility.


''Octopicola huanghaiensis'' infection

Recently discovered, the species ''Octopicola huanghaiensis'' is the first of its genus to infect ''A. fangsiao.'' However, its genus, ''Octopicola,'' is known to commonly infect octopuses.


Abnormalities within infection rates

Another experiment looked at the rate of infection of females versus males. The results were not as expected, 64% of the fatalities were female while the remaining 36% were males. The sample of the collected deceased ''A. fangsiao'' was 1,303; these data were collected between March 16 to April 2, 2017, in the Yellow Sea. These data showed that the death rate of females was higher than males during their Seasonal breeder, breeding season. Upon further examination of the dead female specimens the researchers found that 16% had edema, 37% had broken skin, and 4% had broken arms.


Genetic structure

These octopuses are generally found along the shores of China, and are relatively highly genetic diverse in haplotype diversity, especially in the Zhanjiang province while the lowest haplotype diversity is seen in the Qingdao province. They also have low nucleotide diversity. There is more genetic variation among the population of ''A. fansgsiao'' than there are within the population of ''A. fangsiao.'' Two groups were defined by their genetic similarities and by region: ''A. fangsiao'' in the northern shore, including Dalian, Yantai, Qingdao, and Nantong provinces, were more similar among each other while the ''A. fangsiao'' in the southern shore, including Wenzhou, Xiamen, Dongshan County, Dongshan, and Huizhou provinces, were more genetically similar each other. A haplotype network analysis showed that all the octopuses in the northern provinces shared a haplotype with each other using several Mitochondrial DNA, mitochondrial gene markers (ATPase 6, ND2, and ND5), while the octopuses in the southern provinces shared different haplotypes with each gene marker; in all gene markers, the northern and southern province octopuses did not share any haplotypes with each other.


Culinary use

In Korea, ''Amphioctopus fangsiao'' is called ''jukkumi'' () or ''jjukkumi'' () and is often stir-fried in spicy gochujang-based sauce. File:Jukkumi-bokkeum.jpg, ''Jukkumi-bokkeum'' (stir-fried) File:Jukkumi-gui.jpg, ''Jukkumi-gui (food), gui'' (grilled) File:Seafood skewers.jpg, Seafood skewers sold in South Korea, including ''jju-kkochi'' (webfoot octopus skewers)


References


Further reading

* Norman M.D. & Hochberg F.G. (2005) ''The current state of Octopus taxonomy.'' Phuket Marine Biological Center Research Bulletin 66:127–154. *Furuya, H. (2006). Three new species of dicyemid mesozoans (Phylum Dicyemida) from ''Amphioctopus fangsiao'' (Mollusca: Cephalopoda), with comments on the occurrence patterns of dicyemids. ''Zoological Science'' 23: 105–119.


External links

*
DNA information for ''Amphioctopus fangsiao''
{{Portal bar, Marine life, Animals, Food Octopodidae Cephalopods of Oceania Molluscs of the Pacific Ocean Molluscs of New Zealand Cephalopods described in 1839 Korean seafood