A man captured himself unknowingly holding the world’s deadliest octopus, a blue-ringed octopus, in the Philippines in a ...
British journalist Andy McConnell was enjoying a morning beach walk on Cebu Island in the Philippines when he came across a ...
A UK tourist unknowingly handled one of the world’s most venomous sea creatures while filming on a Philippine beach ...
Andrew McConnell came across the blue-ringed octopus in the Philippines, not knowing it is one of the deadliest animals on the planet despite its small and cute appearance ...
A viral beach clip has become a cautionary tale about how quickly a harmless-looking encounter can turn dangerous in tropical waters.
A British man vacationing in the Philippines very closely escaped death after he unknowingly handled a super poisonous ...
An Australian woman swimming at a Sydney beach was bitten multiple times by the dangerously fatal blue-ringed octopus on Thursday, according to reports. The Australian, a newspaper in Australia, ...
McConnell later said he was unaware of the danger at the time and only understood the seriousness after his post went viral.
An Australian teenager had a lucky escape after being bitten by one of the world's most toxic animals, a blue-ringed octopus, after accidentally picking up the deadly cephalopod hiding in a shell. But ...
This is an archived article and the information in the article may be outdated. Please look at the time stamp on the story to see when it was last updated. SYDNEY, Australia (WJW) – A woman swimming ...
A woman in Australia was recently bitten multiple times by a blue-ringed octopus — one of the world's most toxic animals — and lived to tell the tale. On March 16, the woman was bitten twice on her ...
I try to imagine what would happen if a small sea creature with the capacity to kill 26 humans turned up on an Irish beach.