anyone help

octopus8

Member
Hello all,
I am wanting a new smaller breed of octopus ( i love them)! I am going to use my old sump and convert it to a octopus only tank. It is an 18 tall, am I am going to use a cansister filter and seal the top and use lots of lr. I was wondering if any one had any ideas of breed, or anything else that might be useful info? Maybe use of filter and protein skimmer or anything?
 

aztec reef

Active Member
I sorry to dissapoint you but Octopuses are a difficult species to keep in captivity,(even for advanced hobbiests) especially in an 18g.. they require flawless water chemistry and lots of room to navigate. but if u insist look at the Octopus briareus aka carribean reef octopus.
Also u have to know their inmate compatibility, since they primarily feed on mollusk, crutuceans(sp), and small fish..
 

aztec reef

Active Member
Quote:
Originally Posted by TexasMetal
whether, tonmo.com, and octopus is a greek word so no reason to pluralize in Latin. <
Actually, There are three plural forms of the word octopus.
They include octopi, optopuses, and octopodes.
All three have the word octo which is latin for eight-legged.. octo= ocho (8)
Octavo= eighth
ochopies= eight-legged..
beware of pasting misinformation..
 

texasmetal

Active Member
Originally Posted by Aztec Reef
http:///forum/post/2740383
Quote:
Originally Posted by TexasMetal
whether, tonmo.com, and octopus is a greek word so no reason to pluralize in Latin. <
Actually, There are three plural forms of the word octopus.
They include octopi, optopuses, and octopodes.
All three have the word octo which is latin for eight-legged.. octo= ocho (8)
Octavo= eighth
ochopies= eight-legged..
beware of pasting misinformation..
Smarty pants. If you want to get technical about it...
There are three forms of the plural of octopus; namely, octopuses, octopi, and octopodes. Currently, octopuses is the most common form in the UK as well as the US; octopodes is rare, and octopi is often objected to.
The Oxford English Dictionary (2004 update) lists octopuses, octopi and octopodes (in that order); it labels octopodes "rare", and notes that octopi derives from the mistaken assumption that oct&#333;p&#363;s is a second declension Latin noun, which it is not. Rather, it is (Latinized) Greek, from okt&#7763;pous (&#8000;&#954;&#964;&#974;&#960;&#959;&#965;&#962;), gender masculine, whose plural is okt&#7763;podes (&#8000;&#954;&#964;&#974;&#960;&#959;&#948;&#949;&#962;). If the word were native to Latin, it would be oct&#333;p&#275;s ('eight-foot') and the plural oct&#333;pedes, analogous to centipedes and m&#299;llipedes, as the plural form of p&#275;s ('foot') is pedes. In modern, informal Greek, it is called khtapódi (&#967;&#964;&#945;&#960;&#972;&#948;&#953;), gender neuter, with plural form khtapódia (&#967;&#964;&#945;&#960;&#972;&#948;&#953;&#945;).
Chambers 21st Century Dictionary and the Compact Oxford Dictionary list only octopuses, although the latter notes that octopodes is "still occasionally used"; the British National Corpus has 29 instances of octopuses, 11 of octopi and 4 of octopodes. Merriam-Webster 11th Collegiate Dictionary lists octopuses and octopi, in that order; Webster's New World College Dictionary lists octopuses, octopi and octopodes (in that order).
Fowler's Modern English Usage states that "the only acceptable plural in English is octopuses," and that octopi is misconceived and octopodes pedantic.
The term octopod (plural octopods or octopodes) is taken from the taxonomic order Octopoda but has no classical equivalent. The collective form octopus is usually reserved for animals consumed for food.
I didn't post any misinformation. I posted current information as pertaining to the English language. No sense in cluttering up the discussion with outdated dictionary facts.
 

aztec reef

Active Member
Just my 2 pesos.. latin is octópodos (Octopoda). And its mostly known as the vulgar name of "pulpo"..
octopodes, octopuses, octopi, octope,octopies,octopese are all the same thing: meaning eight-footed.. just like copepodes= oar- footed. Co·pe·pod n (Kope = Greek for "oar" Podos = Greek for "foot"). Hence Copepod = oar-footed, referring to the pair of swimming legs on the same somite that are moved together, like the oars of a sculling shell.
the conjugation changes within regions/countries.
 
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