Starting from:

$9.99

0045_Blue-ringed octopus flashing blue color rings

Royalty-Free Underwater Stock Footage of a Blue-Ringed Octopus (Hapalochlaena lunulata) captured in an intimate super close-up perspective just below the ocean surface in shallow tropical reef waters at night. This cinematic underwater video documents the octopus rapidly changing colors and flashing its intense, electric-blue rings under natural low-light conditions as it moves across the reef.

The footage shows the octopus walking slowly over the coral reef while displaying vivid blue rings, then camouflaging, retreating, and hiding among sand and coral structures, revealing the extraordinary adaptive behavior and defensive display of one of the ocean’s most visually striking and venomous cephalopods. Fine surface textures, expressive eyes, and brilliant blue-ring flashes are clearly visible in this near-surface, ultra-close-up nocturnal reef encounter.

Perfect for nature documentaries, marine-life films, educational content, broadcast productions, and commercial projects, this high-quality underwater stock footage delivers authentic macro-style visuals, crisp detail, natural reef lighting, and smooth, realistic motion.

The clip is ideal for content focused on octopus behavior, venomous marine species, nocturnal reef activity, color change, defensive displays, reef ecosystems, shallow-water habitats, marine biology, and ocean conservation.

This royalty-free underwater video clip includes a commercial use license and is suitable for all major platforms, including YouTube, Instagram, TikTok, Facebook, websites, presentations, and broadcast media.

Technical Details:

  • Resolution: 1920 × 1080 (HD)
  • Format: MOV / H.264
  • Duration: 00:15 seconds
  • Category: Underwater Stock Footage / Blue-Ringed Octopus / Cephalopods / Macro Marine Life / Coral Reef / Marine Wildlife

Enhance your project with professional super close-up Blue-Ringed Octopus stock footage showcasing dynamic color change, defensive blue-ring flashing, nocturnal reef activity, and natural walking behavior, ideal for documentary storytelling, marine education, conservation messaging, scientific content, advertising, and cinematic underwater visuals.