Aquarium Octopus Attacks 6-Year-Old Boy And Turns White The Next Time He Visits
Britney Taryn has taken to TikTok after she and her son Leo (6) had a harrowing experience at a Texas aquarium when an octopus latched onto her boy and refused to let go.
The two had been visiting and touching the sea creature for three years without incident. After a hiatus from their routine, they returned to the facility and were awed by its size, to the point that Taryn checked with the staff to make sure it was the same Octopus.
- A San Antonio aquarium visit turned traumatic when an octopus latched onto 6-year-old Leo and wouldn’t let go.
- The octopus reportedly changed color and suddenly started moving when it saw the boy again later that day.
- PETA has condemned the aquarium’s animal encounter program, calling it a “recipe for disaster.”
Little Leo is now walking around with string suction bruises running the length of his right arm.
The octopus is known to suction onto visitors
Image credits: Diane Picchiottino/Unsplash
“This thing is huge,” Taryn said in the video posted on July 15, which has since been shared nearly 13,000 times.
“It had grown exponentially,” she said, sharing a picture of the large aquatic animal. “We even flagged down an employee to ask if it was the same octopus,” and received an affirmative answer.
“Every single time we’ve touched this octopus, it suctions onto him and then it releases,” her account continued.
Image credits: britneytaryn
She described the behaviour as “fun and cool” and claimed it had been doing that to everyone in the line before them, leaving them unprepared for what was about to happen next.
The octopus started climbing out of its tank while clinging to the boy
“My son is very level-headed when it comes to animals,” Taryn claimed. But this time around, Leo found himself at something of a misunderstanding with his favorite aquarium playmate.
“Mom, it’s not letting me go,” he called his mother with a demeanor she described as “way too calmly.”
Image credits: britneytaryn
Taryn goes on to explain that she stepped in and tried to pull her son away from the animal, but it started climbing up its side of the glass and out while clinging to the boy.
“The reason we don’t have videos of this is because my friend,” who was in charge of filming the interaction, “was also freaking out.”
When an employee did arrive, he was nonplussed and described the animal as being “playful”
Image credits: britneytaryn
After struggling for a while, and her son’s attempts to peel away the octopus’s tentacles failed, Taryn, who would not touch the creature herself, noticed purple spots on her son’s skin and decided it was time to escalate the matter.
“I start yelling,” she said, claiming there were no employees present.
When, according to Taryn, one did show face, they came in a stroll and observed aloud that the eight-armed specimen was feeling rather “playful today.”
Image credits: britneytaryn
The employee stood corrected about his “playful” assessment when he, too, could not pry Leo out of the creature’s grip.
Taryn watched as “more and more” tentacles “enveloped” her son
The employee summoned two assistants who came running with ice packs, which they placed on the octopus.
Throughout the fray, Taryn noticed how the creature “suctioned onto the employees ” and let go repeatedly, but clung to Leo for dear life.
@britneytaryn My son has visited the same octopus every week for 3 years. She always loved him until today, when she tried to pull him into the tank. It took 3 aquarium employees to get her off. Was it affection? Recognition? Or something more dangerous? We thought it was a sweet animal bond… until it left bruises. And when we walked back later, she changed color the second she saw him. 🎥 Watch til the end. 💬 Tell me: Was this love or a warning sign? 🧠 Octopus experts, weigh in. #Octopus#AquariumStory#AnimalBondGoneWrong#OctopusBehavior#SeaLife#AnimalInstinct#MarineBiology#ParentingTikTok♬ original sound – Britney Taryn
While the three men worked hard at prying the creature loose, Taryn observed: “More and more tentacles start to like… envelope [her son’s] arm.”
The woman skipped the part about how exactly they managed to get the creature of the 6-year-old, but noted that they visited the San Antonio aquarium again hours later, because Leo wanted to see if his octopus was okay.
When the octopus saw Leo again, it started moving and changed color
She captured the animal clinging to the side of its tank, reservedly, until it laid eyes on her son.
Image credits: sanantonio_aquarium
The video shows the animal moving suddenly, spreading out, and changing from its customary terracotta to white.
“This behavior,” Taryn says into the camera, “is not normal.”
The aquarium insists that the octopus is not harmful
According to KSAT 12, Taryn has since reached out to the Texas State Aquarium, which told her to take the matter to the United States Department of Agriculture, whom she notified of her son’s “extensive suction bruises” and how “employees on-site downplayed the incident.”
@sanantonio_aquarium A creature out of this world! #Octopus#GiantPacificOctopus#Tentacle#Ocean#Marine#MarineBiology#Animals#DidYouKnow#Nature#WildFacts#Aquatic#Aquarium♬ original sound – San Antonio Aquarium
While not addressing the issue directly, an employee of the aquarium posted a video on TikTok talking about an octopus named Cthulhu.
“I promise it’s not a cosmic cry for help … bruises or hickeys will disappear within seven to 14 days,” he said.
“They’re not harmful or anything like that.”
PETA is not happy with the facility
Image credits: sanantonio_aquarium
Animal rights advocacy group, People For The Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA), has since weighed in on the San Antonio aquarium incident, and it appears there is no love lost between the two.
“This slimy facility’s exploitative encounters are a recipe for disaster, as injuries abound when timid animals such as octopuses are denied everything natural and important to them and subjected to a barrage of grabbing hands.”
@sanantonio_aquarium Let’s talk about her suction cups! #Octopus#GiantPacificOctopus#Marine#MarineBiology#Ocean#Conservation#Nature#Animals#AnimalFacts#MarineBiologist♬ Ocean – Soft boy
“For everyone’ssake,” the organization wrote on its website on August 1, “PETA is calling on the San Antonio Aquarium to stop forcing wild animals to interact with humans and release this octopus to her natural habitat, if possible, or an accredited facility where she can finally live in peace.”
Notably, an April 2 inspection found no instances of noncompliance.
Some think it’s the aquarium’s fault for having the octopus in a touch tank
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The animal was latched on to her son, and he is unsuccessfully trying to get it off, but she won't touch it?! As a mother I would think if you feel your child is in danger, you would do whatever it takes to protect them, including touching an octopus.
An octopus should NEVER be in a touch tank!!! The Seattle Aquarium usually has a young Pacific octopus (which comes from the Puget Sound) in a closed tank with places to hide and will turn the light off if it seems stressed. The octopus is released back to the Sound after a few weeks.
I’ve been to this aquarium and it’s AWFUL. It’s very obvious that the animals aren’t well taken care of. Also, this is the same aquarium that someone successfully stole a shark from a few years ago…so that should say something about how well they pay attention to animal safety.
Octopus explore the world through their arms, and naturally suction onto things. Anyone who has seen recordings of interactions knows that suctioning onto a person is how the octopus shows curiosity and friendliness. The problem here was the strength of the octopus. An octopus that size should not be in a touch tank. It's asking for the animal or the visitors to get hurt. The kid is bruised, but the octopus may have been injured as well, and was likely very stressed. It's very irresponsible of the aquarium not to have staff closely supervising the touch tank.
Kinda like birds (well, not physically, obviously!) in that birds use their beaks to explore and learn, and nibbles indicate curiosity; they don't intend to hurt. If a bird intends to hurt you, trust me; you'll know. And of course pulling something off that's latching onto you with suction cups is going to bruise. That's just common (or apparently not-so common?) sense.
Load More Replies...The octopus was curious. But lets get real with the attachment of human emotions onto non-human creatures. Especially aquatic animals. We cannot, for certain, understand exactly what an octopus is feeling just by observing their actions. I do agree bruising is nothing to be alarmed about. It looks worse than it actually is. This was just the octopi's natural action to cling onto whatever surface it finds. Since we are not an octopi food source, of course it's not going to just eat us. But there is a possibility of a curious bite. You never know with wild animals. I do agree that the aquarium was irresponsible in allowing touching without supervision. But how do people expect the staff to react in these situations? Panic? That doesn't do anything to solve the problem. If this happened to an older person, who may have reacted more harshly, that octopus may be the one in more danger.
Wait until the boy goes home after her first girl friend looking like this again, what will do the mom with the girl... these bruises happens often but agree on everything you wrote.
Load More Replies...Hey BP, please do not consult with or ask PETA for their opinion on anything. They have ZERO credibility and do not deserve a platform to voice themselves.
This story is so "Idiocy of Today": i'm not sure who is more wrong- an institution which allows pestering a wild animal in captivity while not providing supervision and adequate info, or this drama mum seeking attention. Poor octopuss and poor kid both sufferng stress that could have been avoided had there been any consideration on both sides. Octopusses are very interactive in the wild and communicate with ther tentacles, so yes, they do tend to attach themselves with ther suctions- the fact that it cling so hard is connected with the sress and panic all around... hickeys will disapper soon. Don't try this with piranhas or sharks, mind you. Get a dog.
The animal was latched on to her son, and he is unsuccessfully trying to get it off, but she won't touch it?! As a mother I would think if you feel your child is in danger, you would do whatever it takes to protect them, including touching an octopus.
An octopus should NEVER be in a touch tank!!! The Seattle Aquarium usually has a young Pacific octopus (which comes from the Puget Sound) in a closed tank with places to hide and will turn the light off if it seems stressed. The octopus is released back to the Sound after a few weeks.
I’ve been to this aquarium and it’s AWFUL. It’s very obvious that the animals aren’t well taken care of. Also, this is the same aquarium that someone successfully stole a shark from a few years ago…so that should say something about how well they pay attention to animal safety.
Octopus explore the world through their arms, and naturally suction onto things. Anyone who has seen recordings of interactions knows that suctioning onto a person is how the octopus shows curiosity and friendliness. The problem here was the strength of the octopus. An octopus that size should not be in a touch tank. It's asking for the animal or the visitors to get hurt. The kid is bruised, but the octopus may have been injured as well, and was likely very stressed. It's very irresponsible of the aquarium not to have staff closely supervising the touch tank.
Kinda like birds (well, not physically, obviously!) in that birds use their beaks to explore and learn, and nibbles indicate curiosity; they don't intend to hurt. If a bird intends to hurt you, trust me; you'll know. And of course pulling something off that's latching onto you with suction cups is going to bruise. That's just common (or apparently not-so common?) sense.
Load More Replies...The octopus was curious. But lets get real with the attachment of human emotions onto non-human creatures. Especially aquatic animals. We cannot, for certain, understand exactly what an octopus is feeling just by observing their actions. I do agree bruising is nothing to be alarmed about. It looks worse than it actually is. This was just the octopi's natural action to cling onto whatever surface it finds. Since we are not an octopi food source, of course it's not going to just eat us. But there is a possibility of a curious bite. You never know with wild animals. I do agree that the aquarium was irresponsible in allowing touching without supervision. But how do people expect the staff to react in these situations? Panic? That doesn't do anything to solve the problem. If this happened to an older person, who may have reacted more harshly, that octopus may be the one in more danger.
Wait until the boy goes home after her first girl friend looking like this again, what will do the mom with the girl... these bruises happens often but agree on everything you wrote.
Load More Replies...Hey BP, please do not consult with or ask PETA for their opinion on anything. They have ZERO credibility and do not deserve a platform to voice themselves.
This story is so "Idiocy of Today": i'm not sure who is more wrong- an institution which allows pestering a wild animal in captivity while not providing supervision and adequate info, or this drama mum seeking attention. Poor octopuss and poor kid both sufferng stress that could have been avoided had there been any consideration on both sides. Octopusses are very interactive in the wild and communicate with ther tentacles, so yes, they do tend to attach themselves with ther suctions- the fact that it cling so hard is connected with the sress and panic all around... hickeys will disapper soon. Don't try this with piranhas or sharks, mind you. Get a dog.





















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