Hold it close: male octopus hold their hectocotylus closer to their body

Research Square (Research Square)(2024)

引用 0|浏览0
暂无评分
摘要
The right third arm of the male octopus is the hectocotylized arm. This arm is modified by anatomy specialized to hold and transfer sperm packets to the female, and lacks suckers at the distal end. Male octopus may be distinguished by the skilled eye from their habit of holding their hectocotylus closer to their body in a protective manner, although this observation has never been described quantitatively. We utilized a three-step process of data annotation, pose estimation model training, and model inference to show that this common observation is true of Octopus rubescens. In 2338 images, the eyes, mantle tip, and arm tips of two male (n = 1152) and three female (n = 1085) octopuses were annotated by an experimenter. These images were then used to train a DeepLabCut pose estimation model which achieved a RMSE of 1.78 cm. This model was then used to annotate 11.4 h (n = 408,985 images) of four female and eight male octopuses moving across the middle of a large aquarium. We then compared the human annotated data, and the model inference data separately. In both datasets we compared the arm-tip-to-eye centered point distances, as well as the octopus centric arm tip 90
更多
查看译文
关键词
Octopus,Cephalopod,Hectocotylus,Behavior
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要