A six-year-old boy was harm when an octopus grabbed on to his arm and would not let go after the boy reached right into a contact tank on the San Antonio Aquarium, his mom stated.
Britney Taryn, the boy’s mother, has gone viral on TikTok after posting about her son’s encounter with an enormous Pacific octopus on a July 14 go to. The ocean creature connected itself to her son Leo’s arm, she stated, noting that they go typically and have touched the animal loads of instances earlier than.
In some movies, the boy’s arm could be seen lined in small darkish spots — purple suction bruises from his wrist to his armpit.
“He began saying, ‘Mother, it is not letting me go,'” Taryn stated in a single TikTok video.
It took three adults to get the octopus off the small boy’s arm, she stated.
Shortly after the accident, the San Antonio Aquarium posted a video on TikTok in regards to the bruises this octopus can go away behind, however didn’t straight confer with the story Taryn has been sharing. The worker within the video stated the bruises should not dangerous and can go away inside 7 to 14 days.
Meg Mindlin, an octopus biologist, stated octopi “sense and discover their surroundings” utilizing their arms, and depend on style sensors of their suction cups to grasp what’s going on of their world.

Taryn’s movies have sparked on-line debate about whether or not it is secure for youths to the touch these animals, however Taryn has kept away from calling the accident an assault. She has stated in movies that she and Leo have since returned to the San Antonio Aquarium to see the identical octopus.
Nonetheless, she says she by no means acquired any form of warning about what the octopus may do earlier than permitting her little one to work together with it. She’s taken to social media, she stated, to share the warning for others, as a result of whereas Leo was calm within the scenario, different kids might not be.
On TikTok, she has campaigned for safer and extra snug dwelling situations for this animal and others in comparable conditions.
Taryn says she has reached out to the San Antonio Aquarium and has requested them to correctly doc the incident and for an evidence of the aquarium’s security protocols for when guests work together with animals. As of a video posted Monday, she had not heard again.