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Catalog Data

Author:
Schweid, Richard 1946-  Search this
Physical description:
198 pages : illustrations (chiefly color) ; 19 cm
Type:
Books
Date:
2014
Contents:
Octopus body -- Octopus brain -- Octopus mind -- Octopus fishing, farming and marketing -- Octopus cuisine -- Octopus iconography -- Octopus keeping -- Timeline
Summary:
In this heavily illustrated book, Richard Schweid details this animal's remarkable natural history and its multifaceted relationship with humans. Schweid describes the octopus's intelligence, defense mechanisms, and short lifespan. He shows how some people have considered octopuses as nothing more than a meal and examines their role in the modern global fish and seafood industry. Other cultures, he reveals, see them as erotic totems or symbols of the darkest evils, and he discusses the difficulties people face when trying to keep them as pets--they are able to use their problem-solving skills, mobility, and boneless body to escape seemingly secure tanks.
Topic:
Octopuses  Search this
Octopuses--Social aspects  Search this
Octopuses in art  Search this
Cooking (Octopus)  Search this
Human-animal relationships  Search this
Animals and civilization  Search this
Data Source:
Smithsonian Libraries
EDAN-URL:
edanmdm:siris_sil_1029568