Millions of chromatophores
Octopuses have up to several million chromatophores, each individually nerve-controlled.
Marine Biology
An octopus can transform from ghostly white to mottled red-brown to jet black in less than a second - and it can do this while being completely colorblind. How does an animal match any background with pixel-perfect precision when it cannot see color? Imagine your skin covered in millions of tiny balloons, each filled with different colored pigment. Your brain can inflate or deflate any combination in an instant, painting any pattern across your entire body simultaneously.
Octopuses change color using three types of specialized skin cells: chromatophores - tiny elastic sacs filled with pigment (yellow, red, brown, or black) that expand or contract under direct neural control; iridophores - cells with stacked reflective plates that create iridescent structural colors; and leucophores - cells that reflect ambient light, creating white or transparent effects. The brain controls these cells directly via nerves, so color changes occur in milliseconds - as fast as a muscle contraction. The combination of all three layers allows the octopus to generate an essentially unlimited range of colors, patterns, and textures.

Millions of chromatophores
Octopuses have up to several million chromatophores, each individually nerve-controlled.
Speed of change
Color changes can occur in under 200 milliseconds - faster than a human eye blink.
Colorblind but precise
Most octopuses are colorblind (only one photoreceptor type), yet they produce perfect color matches.
Myth: Octopuses match any color perfectly
They match brightness and pattern well but are limited by pigment palette (yellow, red, brown, black).
Myth: Only for camouflage
Color change also serves communication (threats, courtship) and possibly thermoregulation.
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