Rambo the octopus takes photos of tourists with Sony camera - Action News
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Science

Rambo the octopus takes photos of tourists with Sony camera

Tired of asking other humans to take photos of you? At a New Zealand aquarium, you can get an octopus to do it instead.

Kelly Tarlton's Sea Life Aquarium charges $2 for photo taken by sea creature

Rambo, a female octopus at Kelly Tarlton's Sea Life Aquarium in Auckland, New Zealand, has been trained to use a $300 Sony Cyber-shot TX30 waterproof digital camera to take photos of tourists. (Sony New Zealand/YouTube)

Tired of asking other humans to take photos of you? At a New Zealand aquarium, you can get an octopus to do it instead.

If you pay $2 to get your photo taken by Rambo, you're guaranteed not to have a finger in the shot. But there's always the possibility that a tentacle will sneak in. (Sony New Zealand Facebook page)

Rambo, a female octopus at Kelly Tarlton's Sea Life Aquarium in Auckland, has been trained to use a $300 Sony Cyber-shotTX30 waterproof digital camera to take photos of tourists. The aquarium charges just $2 in local currency (about $1.88 Canadian) for the service. Themoney goes toward aquarium operations andprograms.

"She loves the game now," said Rambo's trainer, Mark Vette, in a video posted online by Sony New Zealand.

The company sponsored Rambo's photography training to help raise awareness about how intelligent octopuses are and show how durable the TX30 camera is, reported the website DIY photography.

The project certainly showcases Rambo's intelligence she was trained in just three tries to respond to a buzzer as a cue to take a photo, Vette said in an interview with the TVNZ show Seven Sharp.

Vette, lead behaviourist for Animals on Q, an Auckland-based firm that has trained a variety of animals, added that if a dog learned the same trick in 10 tries, "I'd be very happy."

As for the durability of the camera, it might be advertised as shock-proof, but it was definitely not octopus-proof.

When Rambo hears a buzzer, she clambers onto the camera, and reaches her tentacle down a tube to push a red button that turns on the camera and takes a photo. (Sony New Zealand/YouTube)

"On day two, she pulled the camera off, ripped it up, smashed it to bits and spat it out," Vette recalled in the Sony video. "We realized how powerful she was."

Eventually, the camera was secured in a specially-designed octopus-proof housing that appears to be made of plexiglass.

Rambo takes photos by reaching her tentacle down a tube to push a red button that turns on the camera and takes a photo.

Dozens of her photos have been posted on the Sony New Zealand Facebook page.