On the identities of the molluscan names described in A Short Zoology of Ta h i t i in the Society Islands by Anthony Curtiss in 1938 (Mollusca: Cephalopoda, Gastropoda)
Author
Low, Martyn E. Y.
Author
Tan, Siong Kiat
text
Zootaxa
2014
3764
3
394
400
journal article
46472
10.11646/zootaxa.3764.3.9
ee9b02df-1271-4e2a-835e-3f998c543975
1175-5326
226594
00D46BEF-8616-43AB-A6DE-01AFA532CC95
Sepia barffi
Curtiss, 1938
, a synonym of
Octopus cyanea
Gray, 1849
Original description (pp. 187, 188).
“The Tahiti
octopus
or eight-armed cuttle is usually about the size of a man’s fist, with eight legs dangling down, and no tentacles besides. The web at the base of the legs does not come far down, and there are no horns. The body is rounded at the rear, with no fins. Both body and legs are gray, with the sucking disks reddish. At breeding-time one of the legs of the male
octopus
swells up and serves him as a prick or intromittent organ; it is jerked loose by the female, who carries it away, and so seven-legged octopusses are sometimes seen. The Tahiti
octopus
is tough, and must be pounded before it is cooked; but, if properly prepared, it is just as good as those of
Italy
or
Gibraltar
. It is common on the barrier-reef, and is called by the Indians
feé
. (
Sepia barffi
. (In the sea, near Tautira.))”.
Identity.
The description of the Tahiti
octopus
provided by Curtiss seems to agree well with
Octopus cyanea
Gray, 1849
, even though we acknowledge that the colouration of living animals can be variable. Males of
Octopus cyanea
are known to wave a raised and coiled modified arm tip at the females during courtship displays (
Norman 2000
), which also agrees with Curtiss’s observation on the apparent swelling of a leg in males during the breeding season.
Octopus cyanea
is one of the most common near shore species on the coral reefs of the tropical Indo- Pacific, and the animals are collected and sold in fish markets in the central and southern Pacific (
Norman 1998
).