Why not? They do quite well in captivity.these animals do not belong in captivity
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Why not? They do quite well in captivity.these animals do not belong in captivity
Yeah me to and they are not that expensive. All I have to do is find one that a dealer or someone is trying to sell!As long as you can keep it locked in the tank it's no different than keeping venomous snakes. I have a few rattlesnakes,eyelash vipers, and some Cobras. It's all about the precautions. And yes I would love to have a blue ringed
How did you get yours?
The largest octopus in the world, the giant Pacific, has a live span in the wild of 3 to 5 years.Octopus, like all cephalopods, have a life span of 2 years at the most, in the wild or captive. That includes giant squids and giant octopus. Do you really want to spend lots of effort and money to import an already adult animal just to have it in captivity for a few months?
The largest octopus in the world, the giant Pacific, has a live span in the wild of 3 to 5 years.
Yes, I agree that his point was spot on; however, his statement that all cephalopods have a life span of two years at most in the wild or captive is erroneous. The chambered nautilus is a cephalopod, and it is reputed to live over 15 years.At our facility ours was estimated around 6 years before she passed. Yet Nuno has a point, most do not live for terribly long at all, around the 1-2 year mark. Which considering the insanely long lifespans for most of the things we keep it's a very short period of time.
How about y'all answer the question instead of trying to talk them out of something they obviously have done research on?

