Macrotritopus defilippi is well camouflaged on a sandy seabed, but it is a predator and needs to move around in order to feed. When it does this, its camouflage breaks down. Humann and DeLoach (2002) reported that
Macrotritopus defilippi sometimes swam backwards in a normal octopus-style but that on other occasions, it moved forwards in a flattened position with its arms streaming beside it, making it superficially resemble a flatfish. The octopus swims close to the contours of the sand surface, even hugging ripples in the sand, so that no shadows are formed. Living on the same sandy plains in the Caribbean as this octopus is a small, bottom-dwelling flounder, the
plate fish (
Bothus lunatus). The colour of this fish is also variable and usually resembles the substrate, which makes it well-camouflaged when stationary but more visible when it moves about, at which time it engages in characteristic short bursts of swimming activity. Hanlon, Watson, & Barbosa (2010) studied
Macrotritopus defilippi in the wild in the Caribbean, and consider it to be a
mimic of the flounder when it swims. There are similarities in both the speed and duration of bouts of swimming, the style of movement and the posture adopted by the two. Typically, the plate fish swims for about 6 seconds (3-43s) and the octopus for 2 seconds (1–20s) and both then rest for 2 or 3 seconds (1–8s flounder, 1–13s octopus) before swimming again. Both keep close to the rippled sand contours of the seabed and the octopus keeps its eyes on the upper side of its body, which increases its resemblance to the lefteye flounder. In the Pacific Ocean there are two species of octopus,
Thaumoctopus mimicus and an unnamed species, which are known to mimic flounders when swimming, but
Macrotritopus defilippi is the first such species known from the Atlantic Ocean. ==References==