Skip to content
ScienceBlog.com
  • Featured Blogs
    • EU Horizon Blog
    • ESA Tracker
    • Experimental Frontiers
    • Josh Mitteldorf’s Aging Matters
    • Dr. Lu Zhang’s Gondwanaland
    • NeuroEdge
    • NIAAA
    • SciChi
    • The Poetry of Science
    • Wild Science
  • Topics
    • Brain & Behavior
    • Earth, Energy & Environment
    • Health
    • Life & Non-humans
    • Physics & Mathematics
    • Space
    • Technology
  • Our Substack
  • Follow Us!
    • Bluesky
    • Threads
    • FaceBook
    • Google News
    • Twitter/X
  • Contribute/Contact

SMBE Journals

Shown are photographs of A. argo and its paper-thin eggcase; a map of the location off Oki Island, Japan, where the sequenced specimen was caught; the nearly intact Hox gene cluster, which was previously thought to be fragmented in all octopuses; and a depiction of the A. argo LamininG3 protein, which is homologous to a protein in the nautilus shell but does not appear to be present in the eggcase of A. argo.

Inside the genome of the world’s weirdest octopus

Categories Life & Non-humans

Comments

  • Gen on Language center of brain not under control of subjects who ‘speak in tongues’
  • ScienceBlog.com on Scientists Capture For First Time Mind-Bending Einstein Effect
  • Mike on Scientists Capture For First Time Mind-Bending Einstein Effect
  • Mitchel on Medicinal Mushrooms Show Promise for Treating Brain Disorders
  • BPD98 on Physicists Capture First-Ever Images of Atoms Interacting in Free Space
Substack subscription form sign up

© 2025 ScienceBlog.com | Follow our RSS / XML feed