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HOMARUS AMERICANUS
THE AMERICAN LOBSTER
The Homarus Americanus, The American Lobster, is
also known as the Massachusetts lobster, the Maine lobster, the
Canadian lobster or the North Atlantic lobster. But no matter
what name you use, it is New England's best tasting and most famous
seafood. It is no wonder that throughout the world it is often
referred to as the KING of SEAFOOD.
In biological terms, the lobster is considered
an invertebrate, members of the Class Crustacea of the Phylum
Anthropoda. All animals are classed according to common
anatomical features. Crabs, shrimp, crayfish, water fleas,
copepods, barnacles and wood lice are other crustaceans.
Lobsters (as are all crustaceans) are similar to insects and other
arthropods.
Where are lobsters
caught? The American lobster is found on the east coast
of North America, from Newfoundland to North Carolina. In
1992, over 57 million pounds of lobsters were landed in the US,
while Canadian provinces landed 94 millions pounds. Approximately
90% of US landings come from Massachusetts, Rhode Island and
Maine.
What do lobsters
eat? Lobsters usually move around and hunt for food at
night. It was once thought that lobsters were scavengers and
ate primarily dead things. However, researchers have discovered that
lobsters catch mainly fresh food (except for bait) which includes
fish, crabs, clams, mussels, sea urchins and sometimes even other
lobsters! There are, however, many fish that eat baby
lobsters.
Where do lobsters
live? Small lobsters - less than 1½ " carapace (carapace
length is measured from the rear of the eye socket to the rear of
the main body shell) - are very cryptic, hiding in and about sea
weeds and rocky habitat that provide adequate food and shelter from
predators. Adolescent lobsters (1½" to 3½" carapace) dominate
coastal habitats and offshore areas. They generally exhibit
minimal migratory behavior. Larger, more adult lobsters may
inhabit deeper waters, but return seasonally to shallow warmer
waters.
Life Cycle of the Lobster A
female lobster mates primarily when she is in the soft-shell state
right after she has shed her shell (molted).
A freshly laid lobster egg is the size of the
head of a pin (1/16").
A 1-pound female lobster usually carries
approximately 8000 eggs. A 9-pound female may carry more than
100,000 eggs. The female carries the eggs inside for 9
to 12 months, and then for another 9 to 12 months externally
attached to the swimmerets under her tail.
When the eggs hatch, the larvae will float near
the surface for 4 to 6 weeks. The few that survive will settle to
the bottom and continue to develop as baby lobsters. From
every 50,000 eggs only 2 lobsters are expected to survive to legal
size.
It takes 5 to 7 years for a lobster to grow to
legal size in the ocean. A lobster at legal size will weigh
approximately 1 pound.
Lobsters grow by molting. This is the
process in which they struggle out of their old shells while
simultaneously absorbing water which expands their body size.
This molting, or shell-shedding, occurs about 25 times in the first
5-7 years of life. Following this cycle, the lobster will
weigh approximately one pound and reach minimum legal size. A
lobster at minimum legal size may then only molt once per year and
increase about 15% in length and 40% in weight.
No one has yet found a way to determine the
exact age of a lobster. However, based on scientific knowledge of
body size at age, the maximum age attained may approach 100 years.
They can grow to be 3 feet or more in overall body
length.
How Healthy is the Lobster
Resource? Lobster landings have increased significantly
in the last decade; however, the number of traps fished and general
efficiency of the fishing industry have also increased. In the
Northeast it is one of only a few fishery resources that is
considered to be generally healthy. Fishery and scientist,
however, are continuing to work together to develop management
measures which will help insure adequate egg production to sustain
the resource and fishery. What conservation
methods are being practiced? Conservation is currently
practiced through the safeguarding of lobsters less than 3¼"
carapace length. Any lobster that has a smaller carapace
length of 3¼" must be returned unharmed to the sea. These
lobsters are known as "shorts" or "sub-legals". Egg-bearing
females are also protected, and if caught, must be placed back in
the sea. Lobster traps have escape vents to allow
sub-legal size lobsters to exit the trap while it is still on the
bottom (they can come in, eat, then leave). Not all "shorts"
leave, however, and so the lobsterman must throw them back when they
pull their trap onto the boat. Lobster traps must also have
biodegradable escape panels which will create a large opening and
neutralize the fishing potential of a lost trap. With the
escape panel open, a lost trap or pot actually becomes a habitat
providing shelter without entrapment.
Interesting Facts Besides
the greenish-brown colored lobsters, there are also rare blue,
yellow , red and white ones. Except for the white ones,
they all turn red when cooked.
After molting, lobsters will eat voraciously,
often devouring their own recently vacated shells. This
replenishment of lost calcium hastens the hardening of the new
shell.
Like all arthropods, the nervous system of the a
lobster is very primitive, and contains far fewer nerve cells than
our nervous systems. The nerve cells are grouped in clusters
called ganglia. A lobster has no cerebral cortex, the area of
the human brain that perceives pain.
Lobsters are capable of reflex amputation
(autonomy). They can discard a limb to allow escape so as to
prevent more serious injury; this can be a life-saving
phenomenon. Lobsters have the ability to regenerate some of
their body parts, for example, the claws, walking legs, and
antennae. The fact that the lobster is capable of limb loss
and regeneration is indicative of a very primitive central nervous
system and their differential sensitivity to pain compared to humans
or other types of animals (they can "drop" a claw and go off like
nothing happened. Could you drop an arm or a leg like
that?).
Lobsters do not have vocal chords. Since
this is true, they do not scream or vocalize when cooked. Any
sound you hear could be that of air escaping from the lobster's body
cavity as it expands from heating.
Lobsters "smell" their food by using the four
small antennae on the front of their heads and tiny sensing hairs
that cover their bodies.
The teeth of the lobster are in its
stomach. The stomach is located a very short distance from the
mouth, and the food is actually chewed in the stomach between three
grinding surfaces that look like molar surfaces, called the "gastric
mill".
Lobster is the biggest single fishing industry
in the Northeast. Lobster accounted for 25% of all fishing
revenue for the Northeast in 1996. The lobster fishery was
valued at $242 million and supported about 50,000
jobs. |