Octopus maorum Hutton 1880 is a temperate, shallow water, benthic octopus c
ommonly found in southern Australia and temperate to subantarctic regions o
f New Zealand. Individuals are found subtidally to depths >50 m, commonly a
ssociated with soft-sediment shellfish beds, but may be found less commonly
traversing reefal habitats. Clearly a member of the Octopus macropus compl
ex, and possibly the largest member (at 9.2 kg), O maorum may be distinguis
hed from other species by an orange-brown or purple-gray color with numerou
s small iridescent white spots on the arms, web and dorsal arm crown, but n
o spots on the mantle region. Octopus maorum appears to be a spring-summer
spawner, at which time females lay thousands (7000) of eggs individually to
the substratum. Eggs are 6.5-7.5 mm in size and take approximately 2 mo to
hatch (at 18 degrees C). Hatchlings are small-medium in size (total length
5.06 mm), planktonic, and have a unique and conservative founder chromatop
hore pattern. Octopus maorum is an aggressive species that cannibalizes sma
ller individuals and eggs, and may also attack and eat co-occurring species
(i.e., Octopus tetricus) regardless of size.