Octopus is not just a very special animal, but it is not friendly. Not only with aliens, they are not with their own breeders.
The eight arms, the soft body, are the characteristic of polyps. Their brains are very different from their own, yet scientists thought they would look at how polyps react to drugs that strangle people. They had a different structure than the human body, wondering what the effects of drugs on these special beings?
They found that with their peers, and even during the mating season, the other sexes were reluctant to come into contact with these creatures, but the partidrog made the animals friendly. Not only were they looking for the company of the other octopus, but they were still playing. There was a octopus that floated his arms out in the water and others became incredibly active.
From the experiment, it turned out that although the functioning and structure of the brain of the polyps are completely different, they respond to drugs like humans. That is, it is not just about humans, because drugs release serotonin in the brain of man and octopus, which even helps the flow of the drug in the body. Serotonin has an effect on how we behave in our social relationships.
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Pixabay.com (Images are illustrations)