Well I don't even know if they are real!?
There is no such thing as a tree octopus. It is not endangered. It was all just an internet hoax.
The whole species of octopus is not entirely endangered, but there are some subspecies that are endangered, threatened, or close to being endangered: The Giant Octopus, a giant but gentle octopus, is listed as "Endangered" on the ICUN Redlist. The Pacific Northwestern Tree Octopus is not currently listed as endangered, but some people think that they should be because of their small numbers. There are probably many other endangered subspecies, but they are probably not as well known.
They are not endangered.
The whole species of octopus is not entirely endangered, but there are some subspecies that are endangered, threatened, or close to being endangered: The Giant Octopus, a giant but gentle octopus, is listed as "Endangered" on the ICUN Redlist.
The whole species of octopus is not entirely endangered, but there are some subspecies that are endangered, threatened, or close to being endangered: The Giant Octopus, a giant but gentle octopus, is listed as "Endangered" on the ICUN Redlist.
no
The tree octopus was said to be endangered by loss of habitat, and predation including that by the creatures known as Sasquatch.But the tree octopus does not exist. There are no octopi that are amphibians.The "Pacific tree octopus" (pseudo-classification Octopus paxarboria) was a 1998 internet hoax that was intended as a parody of actual ecological awareness groups. Occasionally young or gullible individuals will mistake the site as one promoting the preservation of an actual animal. A small folowing has provided fake photos, testimonials, and other material.
unicorns, bigfoot, beavcoons, hippogriffs, tree octopus, elves and trolls, etc...
they are endangered only 1 left
Not well. Despite its tentacles, the octopus is ill-suited to survive on land. It would quickly dry out, or become the prey of indigenous birds and predators. The Pacific Tree Octopus is a fictional organism. It was created in 1998 as part of a parody of ecological movements to save endangered species. (see related links)
it is not
YES!