Clever Cuttlefish Show Advanced Self-Control, Like Chimps and Crows | The Conversation

Common Cuttlefish.
Alexandra Schnell in the Cephalopod Mariculture Facility at , Woods Hole, Massachusetts. Photo courtesy the Grass Foundation.
Alex Schnell in the cephalopod facility at the . Credit: The Grass Foundation.

2018 Grass Fellow Alex Schnell writes about her collaboration with Senior Scientist Roger Hanlon and others, recently published in 

When I enter the marine laboratory in the morning, there’s always a chance I’m about to get soaked. You see, our crankiest common cuttlefish, called Franklin, has recently taken to squirting a water jet at me from her tank. I’ve decided it’s her grumpy way of saying she doesn’t want to participate in experiments, because Franklin never hoses me during my evening visits, which is when I’m only in the lab to give her dinner.

Cuttlefish are clever creatures, and squirting saltwater is not their only party trick. They’re , adjusting the colour and texture of their skin to match their environment. Plus, cuttlefish possess a range of , including a , to help them  and adapt to changing prey conditions.

But Franklin’s selective squirting inspired me to test for another cognitive ability in cuttlefish: self-control, which might be what stops Franklin’s impulse to drench me during my evening visits. 

The marshmallow test was first designed to test the willpower of children, not cephalopods.

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