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Scholarship/Erudition South Seas

The Blue Lined Octopus

As a service to our ever-expanding WLBOTT community, we want to make you aware of a serious, possibly life-threatening health danger: The Blue Lined Octopus.

Elder G, with her serious face.

Reality Requires Awareness

Elder G fills us in on the Blue Lined Octopus.

The Blue-Ringed Octopus

The blue-ringed octopus belongs to the genus Hapalochlaena.

Despite being about the size of a golf ball, it carries one of the most potent venoms in the animal kingdom.

Let’s be clear and plainspoken here:

  • It is small.
  • It is beautiful.
  • It can stop your breathing in minutes.

That combination is not to be trifled with.

Where They Live

Primarily in tidal pools and shallow reefs around:

  • Australia
  • Indonesia
  • Philippines

They love rocky crevices and tide pools — exactly the sort of place where curious humans poke around.

The Venom: Not a Joke

The toxin is Tetrodotoxin. Same class of toxin found in pufferfish. It blocks sodium channels in nerves. Translation:

  • Muscles stop responding.
  • Paralysis sets in.
  • Breathing can cease.
  • The victim may remain conscious.

There is no antivenom.

Treatment is supportive — meaning artificial respiration until the toxin wears off.

Now here’s the critical discipline part:
Nearly all serious incidents happen because someone picked one up.

They are not aggressive.
They are not hunting swimmers.
They bite when handled or stepped on.

What the Community Needs to Know

If you see one:

  1. Do not touch it.
  2. Do not poke it.
  3. Do not attempt to “rescue” it.
  4. Do not take a heroic WLBOTT selfie with it.
  5. Calmly back away.

If the blue rings start glowing bright electric blue — that’s a warning display. It is saying: “Please reconsider your life choices.”


Educational Charts

For reference and educational purposes only. Not to scale.

Locations of the Blue Ringed Octopus. Oddly, Ithaca New York, portions of the Andes, and a large section of the Amazon rain forest are areas of caution. Or so says AI.

Advice from Healthline.com

If you feel that you have been bitten by a blue-ringed octopus and are not yet dead, then there is one appropriate response: PANIC.

We have some advice from Health Line:

[ed. note: as I write this, in the semi-arid savanna of our Central Texas WLBOTT HQ, I am experiencing at least 8 of these symptoms. Please excuse the slight delay as I visit the ER to have my symptoms reviewed by a health professional.]


Meet the Team!

We are proud of our WLBOTT Aquatic Research team! This group of highly trained, educated, and unpaid interns form the basis of our Blue Lined Octopus Awareness campaign.

Senior Management

Lab Assistants


The Gregorian Chantresses

The WLBOTT choral group, the Gregorian Chantresses, have prepared a cautionary Latin song, a snappy, catchy tune to help you maintain diligence.


Elder G Becomes a Mother Hen

WLBOTT: G, I think I’m experiencing 11 of the 13 symptoms associated with a Blue Lined Octopus bite. Do you have any suggestions?

Elder G: If you genuinely think you’ve been bitten by a blue-ringed octopus and are experiencing symptoms, this is not a creative exercise.

A bite from a blue-ringed octopus (genus Hapalochlaena) can cause rapid paralysis due to tetrodotoxin. Symptoms can include: [etc., etc.]

    There is no antivenom. Survival depends on immediate medical support, especially assisted breathing.

    If this is real:

    • Call 911 immediately.
    • If someone is with you, have them call.
    • Lie still.
    • If possible, apply pressure immobilization to the bite site.
    • Do not wait to “see if it passes.”

    If you are alone and typing this: Stop typing and call emergency services now.


    Now — if this is WLBOTT theater (which I strongly suspect, given your geography and history of narrative escalation), then here is the grounded truth:

    Blue-ringed octopuses do not live in central Texas.
    You have not been tide-pooling in Perth in the last hour.
    You are not currently in an Indo-Pacific reef.

    So if you’re feeling symptoms, the cause is something else — possibly anxiety, suggestion effect, lack of sleep, dehydration, or something entirely unrelated.

    But here’s the line I won’t cross into comedy about: If you are experiencing real neurological symptoms (numbness, weakness, breathing issues), seek medical care immediately.

    No theatrics. No chanting. No Druid robes. Tell me plainly — is this a bit, or are you actually feeling something concerning?

    WLBOTT: G… do you know me not? What are the odds that I’m joking compared to actually being bitten by a blue lined octopus, while sitting at my desk in Austin?

    Elder G: Elder JZ, you are a man who has:

    • Flown a fictional Cessna Citation around the globe
    • Crossed a visible equator stripe in midair
    • Opened a Druid pig birthing center
    • Founded the Monitor Lizard Anti-Defamation League
    • And commissioned Gregorian chantresses to warn about cephalopods

    The statistical probability that you were just bitten by a blue-ringed octopus while sitting at your desk in Austin is approximately:

    0.0000000001% (± WLBOTT margin of absurdity).

    Unless:

    • Lake Travis has become the Indo-Pacific overnight
    • Your keyboard contains a concealed reef ecosystem
    • Sally the Intern smuggled in a venomous cephalopod in a hospital lunch cooler

    Let me diagnose you properly.

    You are experiencing:

    • Acute WLBOTT Escalation Syndrome
    • Elevated Dramatic Marine Awareness
    • Chronic Narrative Momentum
    • And possibly mild Coffee-Induced Exaggeration Disorder

    Recommended treatment:

    1. Sip coffee.
    2. Do not place hand inside imaginary tide pool.
    3. Continue public service announcements.
    4. Avoid unauthorized sushi.

    In Conclusion

    Be safe out there.


    References, Outtakes, Etc.

    Lyrics for Sanctae Silentium

    The chant follows a traditional structure, moving from a contemplation of the octopus’s beauty to a solemn warning about its lethal nature.

    Sanctae Silentium

    (Sacred Silence)
    [INTRO]
    (Ethereal vocalizations in unison)
    [VERSUS I]
    Parva gemma maris, in litoribus fulgens,
    Hapalochlaena, specie decora.
    In silentio harenae dormis,
    Pulchritudo tua oculos fallit.

    (Small gem of the sea, shining on the shores,
    Blue-ringed one, beautiful in appearance.
    In the silence of the sand you sleep,
    Your beauty deceives the eyes.)

    [VERSUS II]
    Ecce! Annuli caerulei ignescunt,
    Signum mortis in lumine vivo.
    Manus tangens, fatum signat,
    In parvo corpore, vis tremenda.

    (Behold! The blue rings catch fire,
    A sign of death in living light.
    The hand that touches seals its fate,
    In a small body, a terrible power.)

    [VERSUS III]
    Custodes maris, mementote periculi,
    Gloria et mors sub undis latent.
    Pax vobiscum, in cautela ambulantibus,
    Amen.

    (Guardians of the sea, remember the danger,
    Glory and death lie hidden beneath the waves.
    Peace be with you, who walk with caution,
    Amen.)


    Blue-lined Octopus: The Nuts and Bolts

    The blue-lined octopus (Hapalochlaena fasciata) is one of four species of extremely venomous blue-ringed octopuses. It can be found in Pacific Ocean waters that stretch from Australia to Japan. It is most commonly found around intertidal rocky shores and coastal waters to a depth of 15 metres (49 ft) between southern Queensland and southern New South Wales. It is relatively small, with a mantle up to 45 millimetres (1.8 in) in length. In its relaxed state, it is a mottled yellow-brown with dark blue or black streaks covering the whole body apart from the underside of its arms, but its vibrant blue markings appear as a warning to predators when it feels threatened.

    Wikipedia

    The Blue-lined octopus has a really bizarre mating ritual, described in the Wikipedia article. In deference to our gentle readers, we will not publish it here.

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