Alright, this may be a joke, but I'm going to respond to it anyway. Yes, of course an octopus lives in water, it is a cephalopod, meaning inner shell with legs. It is a subspecies of mollusk meaning shelled animal. Mollusks store water inside their bodies and live outside of water for long periods of time, but the octopus can only do this for a few minutes before it dies. If you're asking this you either must not know that much about the ocean (hint hint), or you are just trying to play a prank on someone and take up their time in writing this response. So, how's that for an answer, huh?
Octopuses naturally live in the sea, not on land.
Tree octopuses do not exist. All octopuses are marine (live in the ocean).
Octopuses live in freshwater, salt water, and shallow water.
Octopuses live along the sea bed, and will live in any hollow amongst rocks.
No. Octopuses live in salt water, not fresh.
it is probably because they would not be able to support themselves on land and wouldn't be able to move around easily
No dummy
Since octopuses live in rocks and such they will find a lot of fish hiding from their predators.
no
Octopuses are marine animals that live in the sea.
octopuses live in the coral reef
it is found in crevices among the rocks.