Blue Rings

By Rose Liu

Prologue: Sirens

            Wouh! Wouh! For the fourth night in a row, sirens were wailing again. Liam yawned and stretched as he peeked out the window. Washington DC was aglow with what seemed like thousands and thousands of street lights. Liam stroked S’more, his family’s border collie/scotch collie mix. Why were the sirens continually going off? Honestly, he much preferred the hoot of the owl and the chirp of the cricket on his family’s ranch in Blue River, Montana. He wished he were back in Montana snowboarding, instead of being stuck in a place like DC, even if he got gourmet meals every day. Tomorrow afternoon, he will be in Florida, with his family. His dad, the President, was going there to meet with someone who Liam didn’t really know, or care about. Liam didn’t even know their name. Liam sighed, he checked his suitcase for the hundredth time and went back to bed.

Would YOU Like an Octopus Teacher?

By Rose Liu

After watching My Octopus Teacher, a documentary about nature and octopi, I wanted to know more. I wanted to know, how are these intelligent creatures going to evolve to survive climate change and pollution? How were they going to adapt and change?

            I made a list of things I wanted to know and came up with my research question (AKA thesis): How do octopi evolve to withstand climate change and pollution? I was able to come up with an answer: Octopi can evolve to withstand climate change and pollution, adapting quickly to environmental changes by shortening their lifespans, and evolving to use mimicry and pollution as tools to help evade predators.

            I used the internet to help me find websites with information on octopi. All in all, it was mostly successful, although I did discover that to use the internet, I must be extremely specific to get relevant answers.

            First, I found out about the different species of octopi, where they live, what they eat, how they avoid predators etc.

            Next, I discovered that even though climate change and pollution is desaturating the oxygen levels in the water, the octopi have only sped up their life cycle and taking advantage of the fact that their competitors and predators are starting to be rooted out.

            I have also discovered that the level of an octopus’ intelligence is staggeringly high. Everywhere I look there are stories of octopi taking apart tanks, or plugging their outflow pipe, or sneaking off to plunder fish from a neighboring tank. Because they have 8 arms, that they have also developed uniquely complex motor skills.

            Throughout this search, I found out that climate change was the least concern to octopi. They can easily adapt to their new surroundings and use pollution to their advantage. I also discovered the degree of their intelligence, as well as how humanlike they seem to be.

WHICH CONCLUSION DO YOU LIKE BETTER?

Conclusion 1 (extension):

I think this research will certainly open new questions, and new investigations about pollution and nonhuman intelligence, as well as new robotic inventions. Many believe that the octopus is an alien, who knows… someday we might discover our octopi counterparts in some other planet.

Conclusion 2 (summary):

            Throughout this search, I found out that climate change was the least concern to octopi, they can easily adapt to their new surroundings, and use pollution to their advantage. I also discovered the degree of their intelligence, as well as how humanlike they seem to be.

URLs from my research:

4/21

Blue Ringed Octopus:

Size:4-6 cm

Weight: 10-100 gram

Diet: Shrimp, fish, hermit crabs.

Predators: Humans, eels, birds, and whales

Poison: The Blue Ringed Octopus is the only poisonous octopus. It is poisonous due to a chemical they can inject called tetrodotoxin. Tetrodotoxin is one of the most poisonous chemicals animals produce.

Distinguishing markings: Even when they are camouflaged, you can faintly see the blueish rings which signify its poison. When it flashes its rings at you, it means it will bite.

Habitat: Tropics

4/23

Giant Pacific Octopus:

Size: 30ft arm span.

Weight: 300lb.

Diet: Shrimp, lobster, birds and small sharks.

Predators: Sharks and humans.

Habitat: Pacific Ocean

4/27

“With higher temperatures due to climate change, octopuses are changing the way they behave and develop in ways that often times hinder their survival. Birth rates, population size, and energy distribution are all affected drastically with slight changes in temperatures.”

Source: https://adapt136.ucsc.edu/taxa/invertebrates/the-common-octopus-may-stop-being-common-due-to-climate-change#:~:text=With%20higher%20temperatures%20due%20to,with%20slight%20changes%20in%20temperatures.

4/29

“Researchers saw a significant drop in retinal activity in four species of marine larvae (two crabs, an octopus and a squid) when the animals were exposed to reduced-oxygen environments for as little as 30 minutes.” Warming deoxygenation could make octopi lose their vision.

Source: https://www.livescience.com/65495-low-oxygen-blinds-octopuses.html

4/30

 “They are not believed to be under threat, but they are sensitive to pollutants. Scientists are still discovering new species of octopuses.”

Source: https://www.nwf.org/Educational-Resources/Wildlife-Guide/Invertebrates/Octopuses

5/5

“A clever octopus made headlines earlier this year after it swiftly disassembled part of its tank at the Santa Monica Pier Aquarium in California. But out in the open ocean its relative, the veined octopus (Amphioctopus marginatus), has upped the cephalopod intelligence quotient by using coconut shells as tools.”

Source: https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/observations/a-tool-wielding-octopus-this-invertebrate-builds-armor-from-coconut-halves/

5/7

“What was keeping scientists from accepting the existence of consciousness outside of our own family tree? Simple brain anatomy. Older models of brain activity lodged complex, conscious experiences—like musing about a piece of music or reminiscing about a piece of cake—in our highly evolved cortex. But, as the authors of the new declaration noted, many nerve networks involved in “attentiveness, sleep and decision making appear to have arisen in evolution as early as invertebrate radiation, being evident in insects and cephalopod mollusks (e.g. octopus).””

Source: https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/octopus-chronicles/octopuses-gain-consciousness-according-to-scientists-declaration/

5/11

“To cope with the exceptional computational complexity that is involved in the control of its hyper-redundant arms, the octopus has adopted unique motor control strategies in which the central brain activates rather autonomous motor programs in the elaborated peripheral nervous system of the arms.”

Source: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0960982215002663

5/14

“When scared, octopuses will shoot a dark liquid, sometimes called ink, at the thing that scared them. This will temporarily blind and confuse a potential attacker, giving the octopus time to swim away. The ink can also dull the attacker’s smelling and tasting abilities, according to the Smithsonian article.  

Octopuses can also change color to hide and match their surroundings. They can turn blue, gray, pink, brown or green. The mimic octopus can also flex its body to resemble more dangerous animals, such as eels and lionfish, according to the World Animal Foundation.”

Source: https://www.livescience.com/55478-octopus-facts.html

5/17

“Here are some of the more notable species the mimic octopus imitates:

Lionfish: By spreading out its arms and propelling itself through the water column, the mimic octopus resembles the brown and white striped lionfish. Since lionfish are known for their very sharp and highly venomous spines, this deters other animals from attempting to prey on the octopus.

Sole (flatfish): The mimic octopus can hurriedly glide over the ocean floor by pulling its arms flush against its’ body and flattening out to resemble a sole. This particular flatfish is poisonous, so imitating the fish’s leaf-life shape helps keep predators at bay.

Sea snake: If threatened, the mimic octopus will pull six of its arms into its burrow, leaving two arms resting on the sandy bottom. The undulating, black and white banded arms look remarkably like an extremely venomous sea snake, encouraging would-be predators to scatter.”

“Scientists suggest that the mimic octopus may choose which animal to impersonate based on which predator is hovering nearby. For example, when bullied by territorial damselfish, an octopus was seen “transforming” into a sea snake, a well-known predator of damselfish.”

Source: https://oceanconservancy.org/blog/2016/04/01/why-the-mimic-octopus-is-the-ultimate-master-of-disguise/

5/18

“Cephalopods are often called ‘weeds of the sea’,” she said, because their “rapid growth, short lifespans and flexible development” let them adapt to environmental changes more quickly than other marine animals.”

“Overfishing and warming oceans may benefit octopuses, squid and cuttlefish. Cephalopods are voracious predators, for which overfishing depletes competition and removes predators. Warmer waters are believed to accelerate cephalopod life cycles, so long as food remains available, and the temperatures do not rise too far.”  Source: https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2016/may/23/octopuses-squid-cuttlefish-warming-oceans-climate-change

DON’T MIX UP THESE CREATURES

(THEY WON’T LIKE IT)

By Lily Liu

While I was learning about deep sea creatures, I found the Giant Isopod. What caught my eye was that they could go 5 years in the wild without eating! After doing some research, I figured they have a land relative, the woodlouse—more commonly known as the roly-poly. Here I’ve summed everything up to make this article.

What animal eats dead whales, but can go without eating for 5 years in the wild, 9 years in captivity? Well, while surfing the web, I found the answer: The Giant Isopod. These stunning creatures live in the deep sea, and that makes sense, since meals are scarce in the deep-sea. These creatures  are found in the Atlantic, Pacific, and Indian oceans. Part of the Bathynomus group, Giant Isopods are the biggest Isopod species. They experience deep-sea gigantism from colder temperatures and longer lifespans. With 14 legs, large, reflective eyes, 4 sets of jaws, a segmented body, 2 antennae, and over 4,000 facets in their large compound eyes, these crustaceans may seem to be nightmares…. But they’re not! Giant Isopods do not eat people, and they do eat dead animals, quickly detecting them using chemoreception. Though they mostly eat dead animals, Giant Isopods can also prey on slow or sessile animals. When an immense number of food comes their way they eat till they can’t move, that is, until the food gets digested. Giant Isopods are known to be light brown or pale lilac in color. If you want to know where this info came from, check out one or both of these: https://www.aquariumofpacific.org/onlinelearningcenter/species/giant_isopod and https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N1EXdpH3XY8

        But wait—Giant Isopods have a land relative, known as the woodlouse. Woodlice live in groups under bark, and in dark, damp places. Though the woodlouse is 18-35cm shorter than the 19-36cm long Giant Isopod, it doesn’t mean that the Giant Isopod’s land relative has to be giant too, right? The woodlouse is about 1 cm long, and is grey, brown, and black and usually a bit shiny on the outside. It can roll into a ball, looking almost exactly like a half-centimeter-long black bead when threatened. It is the only “terrestrial isopod”, meaning it is the only isopod that lives on land. It has a shell exoskeleton which it molts in two stages for a bigger exoskeleton. They have 14 segments, live in forests worldwide, and have over 3 nicknames. They are not eaten by humans. There are over 3,000 species of woodlice discovered. They do their job as decomposers by feeding on rotting plants. However they do sometimes eat young saplings, but don’t worry, they don’t spread diseases. Their predators include toads, spiders, centipedes, and millipedes. Females lay around 24 eggs and keep them in a pouch, which means, they are marsupial. Young woodlice are cared for till they’re independent, and then they go wherever they please.

I think it’s important to research these creatures because they wouldn’t like being mixed up. You’d suffocate a giant isopod by putting it under bark, and you’d drown a woodlouse by throwing it into the sea. I hope this article has informed you that these creatures aren’t nightmares. They are both innocent to humans and it’s something we should know.

GIANT ISOPOD HUNTING CRAB
WOODLOUSE PROFILE VIEW

Again if you want proof I wasn’t making these things up, check out these links:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JjX2pO6irGg, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Ir_Sduppvc, or https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BoyAL5gkncc

Stormy Seas

By Lily Liu

The stormy sea,

Near the sandy shore,

Out in the ocean

Near to me.

The rules not heeded,

They thought lifeboats were

Not needed.

The ocean’s proved them wrong

While its singing its song.

The raging storm

It would not stay put,

No, not even letting peace

Set foot.

The sky’s dark,

And now it’s night.

But through the clouds,

There’s no hint of moonlight.

The world’s pitch black,

Calmness isn’t coming back.

No, not now,

No, not ever.

But please not forever.

Oak

There was an old tree,

Who was planted near the sea,

She endured all the seasons,

But ne’er with any reasons.

And oak was the name of the tree.

The Adventures of Flump and Mira

By Lily Liu

Chapter One

            One day, when a huge flood was taking place on an island off the west coast of Canada, a flying sheep,  who was cold, and rather wet glided soundlessly over the clear waters. He wanted a home, so he decided to look  for one from the sky. As he watched,  a pointy thing with a pointy top floated up. The flying sheep decided to check it out. He slid down smoothly and landed by the pointy thing. It was only then he realized it was a boathouse, and not a pointy thing. There was a large sign, and it said: Meteorologist’s Boathouse.

          “Mee-tee-oor-ool-oo-giests,” He read, “boo-ate-who-see? Wait no, that doesn’t sound right. I remember an older sheep telling another sheep that E-O-R in this word makes the sound ee-or, as in the word meteor. Wait! I know! The word meteor is in the word meteorologist! Hey! I just figured it out! The first word is meteorologist! And the next word…. I remember learning about boats. Boats are dangerous to flying sheep. So the first part of this word is boat. And then my teacher took us on a field trip to a hooman neighborhood. There were houses, so the second word is boathouse. The sign says meteorologist’s boathouse. Now I’ll go inside.”

          When the flying sheep went inside, he realized the owner of the boathouse was away. All he saw was a page of a kid’s homework, an open journal, a TV, and a weather map with magnets to mark the weather. On the kid’s homework, he saw a spot for a name. The spot was not filled in, so he decided to name himself.

          He opened a random book and read, “FLUMP. With a funny, muffled sort of thump….” For this book was Harry Potter. “I want to be called FLUMP! I will call myself FLUMP!” Flump announced proudly. He flipped to the front cover. “This book is called Hairy Pawter and the Sorkerer’s Stone!”

          Then he saw the journal. The writing looked like the entry had been hastily written. Flump looked at it and tried hard to read it:

          Tuesday, August 14, 2046

            The flood here in Canada is very harsh.  With strong winds and heavy rain, I doubt many houses will survive to the end of the flood. Many people have storm cellars, but even so, the cellars may leak, and then all would be disastrous. I hate to think what will happen after the

            And the entry ended there.

Lily’s Story

Title: Lily’s Story

Author: W. Bruce Cameron

Lily has three brothers and no sisters. She is a small, curious, black-and-white pit bull mix. One day, a family of people come. She is introduced to a girl called Maggie Rose, and her two brothers Craig

and Bryan. She also meets their mom and Amelia, a worker at the animal shelter. The instant Lily comes out of her kennel, her whole world expands. And when Maggie Rose takes her outside on another day, she plays catch with a squirrel called Sammy. Lily begins to feel like Maggie Rose is her owner,  and that they belong together. Maggie Rose wants Lily to be hers, but Mom and Amelia decide to find a new home for Lily.

When told this news, Maggie Rose becomes very sad. However, Lily runs away from her new owner to find Maggie Rose. Will Lily find her? Will Maggie Rose’s parents let her keep Lily?

I like this book because it expresses how much loyalty a dog can have in a fun way.

The Elephants’ Party

By Lily Liu

The elephants, preparing to look their best,

wearing tuxedos, robes, or an elegant white vest.

Yes, all the elephants,

wearing clothes that had the most elegance.

Whether it was white or black,

or so long and stiff it always went thwack!

Perhaps their clothes were lightly colored blue,

or silver, or grey, which even counted too.

In the lake— for goodness sake,

swam fish and turtles and frogs,

and here came rabbits and small prairie dogs.

Then elegantly swimming, along came the swan—

followed by a mother deer and its little fawn.

Going home with the belongings they’d be taking,

they heard the rooster call and saw a red dawn breaking.

Falling asleep was none too hard,

and even the dogs didn’t stay to guard.

And all they thought, and all they dreamed,

was about what happened last night, it seemed.

They dreamed only one dream:

only about the Elephants’ Party.

Katrina and the Cat’s Jewel- Prologue

By Lily Liu

Katrina Corel Ex tapped the table impatiently. She was waiting for Oat. Oat was a cat, and also her friend. That was because Katrina could actually turn into a cat. Then she’d have many entrances to a new world, called the Cat World. And in the Cat World, there would be, of course, cats.

Oat had escaped from the Great Invasion, only four months ago. Katrina had befriended him by rescuing him from a group of spiders, in an organization called S.P.I.D.E.R. which was really secret, but plenty of cats knew about them.

“Hurry up, Oat. It doesn’t take that long to explain why a fourteen-year-old wants to be in the CIA, does it?” Katrina asked in annoyance. “Plenty of people want to get into the CIA.”

“It takes much longer than you expected, Kartina,” Oat replied firmly.

Oat!” Katrina hissed. “Just call me Kat!”

Oat was a bit incompetent with names, so he constantly called people by the wrong names.

          “No, no fourteen-year-olds allowed in the CIA. Too young,” Katrina heard the stubborn (and firm) voice of the CIA director, who Katrina knew was going to try to say ‘no’ in whatever way she could.

          “This is my sister, not yours,” Oat replied.

          Katrina glared at both of them. “Hurry up!”

          “Well I’m sorry, Kartina,” said the CIA director since Oat had called Katrina Kartina so many times, the director assumed her name was actually Kartina.

          “No fourteen-year-olds allowed, Kartina,” the director repeated.

          Katrina just glared at her.

          “She’s my sister,” Oat said.

          “Well, she’s too young,” The director glared back at Oat.

          “She’s my sister,” Oat said again, stubbornly.

          “Well, she’s too young.”

“She’s my sister.”

          “Well, she’s too young.”

          Katrina just left.

Katrina and the Cat’s Jewel-Chapter Three-Information

By Lily Liu

Reow…reow…reow…reow…reow…reow…reow…REOW…REOW!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Kim felt the meows more than she heard them. RRREEEOOOWWW!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

“Katrina, were you meowing at me?” Kim asked suspiciously.

“Of course. And just so you know, my cat name is Tigris. Since well, duh, I’m a Bengal cat,” Katrina said, then turned into a human with cat ears, whiskers, paws and a cat nose and a cat tail. “Go north about one mile, I’ll go west, and my friend here, Siame, will go east. We’ll all meet up right here. Kim, there will be a cat’s studio, and you should go there. They will ask you which way you got to the cat world. Then tell them that you went the slide way, and your guider is Mew, and her helper is Meow. For the rest of the questions, tell them ‘reow, meow, mew’. Oh yes, the Cat’s Studio will also give you a cat name like mine. And Siame’s. Hers is Aroura, just so you know.” Katrina looked at Siame. “Ready?”

Siame turned into the cat-human that Katrina was. Kim looked at Katrina for what to do next.

“Let’s go…” Katrina said impatiently. “We have to go or it’s going to rain! And everyone knows cats absolutely HATE rain. Especially if it it’s a downpour. Or a rainshower.”

“Oh,” Kim turned to go.

“You know what to do at the Cat’s Studio, right?” Katrina asked Kim. “They’ll put a collar on you and carve your cat pronunciation on it. Got it? Now let’s get going before it rains, and also, try and avoid talking too much. That can bring down the ‘fate of the Cat World’ down on you, but that’s just a trick from the King to prove if cats are trustable. Don’t worry, I’ll give you a whistle later so that you can call me if you get into trouble. Now really, let’s go!”

Kim nodded. Now this was getting exciting. Like one of those detective stories that you sometimes read as comics and other times you watch on TV. Whatever the case, it was exciting, and Kim wasn’t about to let that part get away. Now, the cat world seemed mor exciting than ever. And they all went their directions, eager to see what was up.