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==Anatomy==
==Anatomy==
===Antennae===
===Antennae===
The long [[antenna (biology)|antennae]] are used to feel the area around a lobster, and appear to be more useful than the eyes.
The long [[antenna (biology)|antennae]] are used to feel the area around a lobster, and appear to be more useful than the eyes. Accually the lobster has no antennaes. They are large penisis on the forhead


===Antennules===
===Antennules===

Revision as of 19:24, 6 October 2008

American lobster
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Subphylum:
Class:
Order:
Infraorder:
Family:
Genus:
Species:
H. americanus
Binomial name
Homarus americanus

The American lobster, Homarus americanus, is one species of lobster found on the Atlantic coast of North America. Within North America, it is also known as the northern lobster, Atlantic lobster or Maine lobster. It thrives in cold, shallow waters where there are many rocks and other places to hide from predators and is both solitary and nocturnal. It feeds off of fish, small crustaceans, and mollusks.

The American lobster is found as far south as North Carolina, and are famously associated with the colder waters around the Canadian Maritimes, Newfoundland and Labrador, Massachusetts, New Hampshire,[1] and Maine. They commonly range from 20 cm to 60 cm in length and ½ kg to 4 kg in weight, but have been known to reach lengths of well over 1 m and weigh as much as 20 kg or more, making this the heaviest marine crustacean in the world.[2] An average adult is about 230 mm (9 inches) long and weighs 700 to 900 g (1½ to 2 pounds).

The adult American lobster's main natural predator is the codfish, but other enemies include haddock, flounder, and other lobsters. Overfishing of cod in the early 20th century has allowed the lobster population to grow enormously.

Taxonomy

American lobsters are invertebrates belonging to the Arthropoda phylum along with insects, spiders, and other creatures having an exoskeleton in place of a backbone. Lobsters, crabs, shrimps, copepods, and other similar species are divided into the Crustacea subphylum because of their flexible shells, differentiating them from hard and brittle-shelled creatures such as oysters, mussels, and clams. Lobsters are further placed in the order Decapoda because of their ten feet. American lobsters are located in the infraorder Astacidea which contains only marine lobsters and freshwater crayfish. These creatures are distinguished from other lobsters because they bear pincers on their first three pairs of legs, the first being the largest. They are again subdivided into to lobsters the Nephropidae family, which contains lobsters used mainly for commercial purposes.[3]

Life cycle

American lobsters molt two to three times per year while juvenile, but only once a year or less often when fully mature, which is about four to seven years old. When a lobster nears its next shedding period, it will start to grow a new shell underneath the current one, and the outer shell will become very hard and darken. The line that runs along the back of the lobster's carapace will begin to split, and the two halves of the shell will fall away. Claws and tail will be pulled out from the old outer shell, as the inner shell is very malleable. The old shell is often eaten for calcium recovery and the leftovers are sometimes buried.

File:Lobsterdiving.jpg
A scuba diver in New York's Wreck Valley displays his lobsters.

Females usually mate right after molting, but mating in between molts, known as intermolt mating, can occur. Larger females can store sperm for several batches of eggs from a single coupling. All females store the sperm to fertilize eggs later, not at the time of copulation. While getting ready to molt the female will find the den of a suitable male and visit it several times. When finally ready to molt the female will do so in that den. After the molt the male will wait for the shell to start to harden, gently stroking the paper thin new shell with his large antennae. After several minutes the male will raise himself on his claws and tail, then use his legs to flip over the female and get on top. The male has a pair of hardened swimmerets, or fins on the bottom, that match a pair of swimmerets on the female which have an opening between them. The sperm, contained in a gelatinous blob called a spermatophore slides down notches in the male's swimmerets into the female. The outside end of the spermatophore hardens to block the hole. The receptacle on the female is part of her shell so she will need to use the sperm before her next molt or lose it. The male dismounts and then may eat the female's shell. The female will then stay in the den for several days while her shell hardens more. Lobsters do not mate for life, contrary to some myths. The female seeks the most alpha male she can find, and the male will mate with as many females as he can.

In the first two weeks after molting, lobsters are very vulnerable, as their shells are so soft they can neither move very fast nor defend themselves with their claws. (At this point, they are often referred to as "shedders" in the industry.) They will often fall prey to other lobsters, especially egg-bearing females, who become very defensive when carrying their eggs.

Because lobsters molt, it is extremely difficult to determine a lobster's age. Many lobsters live up to 50 years.

Anatomy

Antennae

The long antennae are used to feel the area around a lobster, and appear to be more useful than the eyes. Accually the lobster has no antennaes. They are large penisis on the forhead

Antennules

The shorter antennules provide a sense of smell. By having a pair of olfactory organs, a lobster can locate the direction a smell comes from, much the same way we can hear the direction a sound comes from. In addition to sensing smells, the antennules can judge water speed to improve direction finding.

Eyes

The eyes of these lobsters are different from almost all other animals. Rather than using lenses to focus light on sensitive cells, narrow tapered channels lined with a crystalline material reflect the light onto the retinal cells. This same design is proving useful for focusing x-rays and other hard to refract light — as in the namesake Lobster-ISS x-ray telescope.

Mouth

The lobster's mouth is used for more than eating. For burrowing it can be shaped into a wedge and used to push gravel and sand, and used to carry small rocks away. A lobster can even pull itself around by its mouth, if it has lost both claws and all legs by fighting.

A lobster actually chews its food in its stomach, rather than its mouth. Food is chewed between three teeth-like grinders in what is called the gastric mill.

Legs and claws

The first pair of a lobster's ten legs are called the claws and are usually used for hunting and fighting, not locomotion. The other eight legs are used for walking.

At first the claws of a lobster are identical, but with use the lobster will start to favor one over the other. The favored claw will get bigger and be filled with primarily slow-acting muscle tissue which cannot react quickly, but does not tire quickly. This is the crusher claw. The other claw, the pincher, will develop fast-acting muscle tissue useful for grabbing prey quickly. During lobster to lobster fights, one typical move is claw lock where the two lobsters will grab each other's crusher claw and have a showdown of muscle and shell strength.

Bladder

Lobsters have not one, but two urinary bladders, located on either side of the head. Lobsters use scents to communicate who and where they are, and those scents are in the urine, as in dogs. But while a dog will just mark places, lobsters have strong muscles to project long (up to 1½ m) plumes of urine in front of them and do so when they detect a rival or a potential mate in the area. Lobsters also urinate continually while at the doors of their hiding places to indicate who is inside.there bladders are very large.massive accually. they do not have antennaes, its accually an optical illusion

Eggs

The eggs are green, and very small, about 1 mm in diameter. They are carried by the female on the underside of the tail for a period of about one month, whereupon they are released over several days and hatch. The number of eggs carried by a single female can range well into the tens of thousands, but the survival rate is very low, speculated at around 0.1%. Older females produce vastly more eggs than younger ones. In one observation (Francis Herrick, in the 1890s) 5-inch (13 cm) females were found to have about 4,000 eggs, while 10 inch (25 cm) ones produced about 50,000 eggs.

Eggs and newly hatched lobsters can be carried very long distances by ocean currents. Within the egg lobsters molt thirty-five times. At the time of hatching, the larva still looks more like a shrimp than a lobster. For several weeks, the larva floats near the surface of the sea, eating and growing. It has small fins that allow some movement, but not real swimming. The final juvenile stage, the postlarva stage, has been called the "superlobster" by some. It is the only time in a lobster's life that it can swim forward, an act which bears some resemblance to Superman flying. At this age the lobster is about 2 cm long. This stage lasts a week or two, during which the lobster will swim during the day, at speeds of up to 20 cm/s — fast enough to cover 10 km per day. The superlobster will seek a rocky bottom with good hiding places. This way its predators cannot attack it. Without anywhere to hide it quickly falls prey to small fish, such as sculpin and cunner.

Auphrodites

The American lobster is unique in its characteristic auphrodites, which are used by the male organism as fin-like projections for movement.

Mutations

An example of a rare blue lobster

Around one in two million lobsters is blue. A research study conducted by Professor Ronald Christensen at the University of Connecticut discovered that a genetic defect causes a blue lobster to produce an excessive amount of protein. The protein, and a red caratenoid molecule known as astaxanthin, combine to form a blue complex known as crustacyanin, giving the lobster its blue color.[4]

Yellow American lobster at the New England Aquarium

On August 1, 2006 a Maine lobsterman named David Percy caught a yellow lobster near Whaleback Island at the mouth of the Kennebec River. The odds of finding a yellow lobster are approximately 1 in 30 million.[5]

On July 13, 2006 a Maine fisherman named Alan Robinson caught a half-and-half lobster, where the colors are perfectly divided on each side of the shell. He submitted the brown and orange lobster to the local oceanarium which has only seen three lobsters of this kind in 35 years. The chance of finding one is estimated at 1 in 50 million. Lobster shells are usually a blend of the three primary colors: red, yellow and blue. The colors mix to form the greenish-brown color of most lobsters.[6] All split-colored lobsters observed by Bob Bayer of the Lobster Institute in Maine have been hermaphroditic.[7]

It is estimated that only about one in 100 million lobsters are albino — lacking in colored pigments.[8] Also known as "white" or "crystal" lobsters.

Fighting

American lobsters are solitary animals. The only time they peacefully share a burrow or other enclosed area is for mating. At other times, when two lobsters meet, they will size each other up. If one is clearly bigger or stronger, the weaker one will retreat. A well matched pair will move through a ritualized series of aggressive displays until one gives up. These start with whipping antennae at each other, then shoving each other around with their claws, then a claw crushing show of strength called claw lock, and lastly flipping the opponent and trying to kill it. However, at any point before the end a lobster can back-off, admitting defeat, and the victor will usually not progress further. After this the loser lobster will be able to recognize the victor for up to about a week and will immediately back out of a fight.

An exception to this ritual order occurs with egg-bearing females. These lobsters are more solitary than usual, and will skip preliminary steps and go for a kill when possible.

Lobsters as a food

Lobster meal, Digby, Nova Scotia.

American lobsters are a popular food, commonly boiled or steamed; for either method, keeping them alive until they are cooked can help avoid food poisoning, but frozen and refrigeration storage methods are also very common, and safe. Hardshells (lobsters that are several months past their last molt) can survive out of water for up to two days if kept refrigerated. Softshells (lobsters that have only recently molted) will not survive more than few hours out of water. Because of this requirement, they can often be selected out of the tank in many restaurants, and their cost also can vary seasonally. Lobsters are cooked alive, which causes some to refuse to eat them believing such treatment to be inhumane.

Lobster on its own is very low fat but not suitable for low sodium diets. One common way of serving lobster tail is known as surf and turf. Lobster tail usually comes from different varieties of lobsters. The 'tail' of a lobster tail, is not actually a tail but the abdomen, called a telson. Lobsters have a greenish or brownish organ called the tomalley that performs the functions of the liver and pancreas in a human, i.e. it filters out toxins from the body. Some diners consider it a delicacy, but others avoid it, considering it a toxin source or simply dislike eating innards.

Most lobsters before cooking are mottled in appearance, but after cooking, almost all of them are completely red. Caution is advisable, as much of the body will still contain water, which may stay hotter than the outside of the shell, and can scald or startle an inexperienced diner.

A set of nutcrackers and a long, thin tool for pulling meat from inaccessible areas are suggested as basics, although more experienced diners can eat the animal with their bare hands or a simple tool (a fork, knife or rock). Eating a lobster can get messy, and most restaurants will offer a lobster bib (a thin plastic dickey-like item, usually white, usually with a picture of a cooked lobster on it). [citation needed]

Meat is generally contained in the larger claws and tails, and stay warm quite a while after being served. There is some meat in the legs and in the arms that connect the large claws to the body. There is also some small amount of meat just below the carapace around the thorax and in the smaller legs. The meat is generally sweet and tender. Dipping chunks of the meat into melted butter can enhance its taste.

North American lobster industry

File:DSCN3846 guilfordctlobstertraps e.JPG
Lobster traps on Long Island Sound near Guilford, Connecticut

Most lobsters come from the north-eastern coast of North America with the Canadian Maritimes and the US state of Maine being the largest producers. They are caught primarily using lobster traps, although lobsters are also harvested as bycatch by bottom trawlers, fishermen using gillnets, and by scuba divers.

Lobster traps are rectangular shaped cages made of vinyl-coated galvanized steel mesh with woven mesh entrances and traps of the same design made of wood. These are baited and lowered to the sea floor. They allow a lobster to enter, but make it difficult for the larger specimens to turn around and exit. This allows the creatures to be captured alive. The traps, sometimes referred to as "pots", have a buoy floating on the surface and lobstermen check their traps anywhere between one to seven days later. Studies have shown that the inefficiency of the trapping system has inadvertently prevented the lobster population from being overfished. Lobsters can easily escape the trap, and will defend the trap against other lobsters because it is a source of food. The study, conducted at the University of New Hampshire, estimates that only 10% of lobsters that encounter a trap will enter and that only 6% will actually be caught [9].

In the United States, the lobster industry is regulated by law. This is done to protect the lobster industry for future generations. Every lobsterman is required to carry a lobster gauge. This is a measuring device that gauges the distance from the lobster's eye socket to the end of its carapace. If the lobster is less than 3¼ inches (83 mm) long, it is too young to be sold and must be released back to the sea. Dishonest lobstermen could try to sell these "shorts." There is also a legal maximum size of 5 inches (127 mm) in Maine, meant to ensure the survival of a healthy breeding stock of adult males, but in parts of some states, such as Massachusetts, there is none. Also, traps must contain an escape hole or "vent", which allows juvenile lobsters and by-catch species to escape. Law in Maine and other states dictates that a second large escape hole or "ghost panel" must be installed. This hole is held shut through use of biodegradable clips made of ferrous metal. Should the trap become lost, the trap will eventually open allowing the catch to escape [10].

To protect known breeding females, lobsters that are caught carrying eggs are to be notched on a tail flipper (second from the right, if the lobster is right-side up and the tail is fully extended). Following this, the female cannot be kept or sold, and is commonly referred to as a "punch-tail" or as "v-notched". These egg-bearing females are also known as "scrubs", since an unscrupulous lobsterman may scrub the eggs off the underside of the tail with a stiff brush and attempt to sell the lobster as an honest catch. The United States Coast Guard often boards the boats of lobstermen to ensure that they are not carrying "shorts" or "scrubs".

The commercial lobstering industry is largely self-regulated. There have been well-documented examples of 'ocean justice' where dishonest lobstermen have lost their boats, homes and vehicles to vandalism by other lobstermen in retaliation for illegal acts such as scrubbing, selling shorts or hauling another lobsterman's pots. In the past, many lobstermen would keep firearms aboard their vessels to threaten any boaters or other lobstermen who were seen hauling their pots. This practice continues in many parts of New England. The laws of Massachusetts and several other states permit lobstermen to use force to protect their pots.

Lobster management policy in the US is made by committees called LCMT's or Lobster Conservation Management Committees. These groups are made up of local fishermen, policy managers and scientists. The LCMT's report to the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission, an interstate fisheries organization. Lobstermen are unique in the US in that they are able to create their own conservation policy, as set under specific guidelines by scientists and political management.

Lobster boats range from small rowboats to the larger 80+ ft offshore boats that fish the US EEZ from Maine to North Carolina. The average inshore lobster boat is anywhere from 25 to 42 feet long. These inshore boats haul anywhere from 200-500 traps each day.

An inshore lobster boat costs anywhere from US$30,000 to $400,000, depending upon the size of the boat and engine. Lobster traps cost anywhere from $50-80 each, and most lobstermen fish 400-800 traps (800 is the maximum number of traps allowed lobstermen in the inshore Gulf of Maine). In addition, the rope and buoys used are also very expensive.

In Canada

In the late 1990s and early 2000s, lobster fishing was the cause of troubles between Acadians and Mik'mak first nations in the Canadian Maritimes. The Acadian economy (and identity) relied a lot on fisheries, especially lobster. In 1998, the Supreme Court of Canada ruled in favor of the first nations and granted them unlimited rights to natural resources. The decision was based on a treaty from the 1700s. The natives fished more than white Acadians, which caused great upset among Acadian fishermen, whose fishing quota had already dropped dramatically in the years before. The hub of these troubles was Burnt Church, a reserve between Miramichi and the Acadian town of Neguac, in the heart of a region where white people are just as poor as Natives. White fishermen had cut the buoys off Native-owned lobster traps, causing the lobster to be lost and become a hazard to marine life. A Royal Canadian Mounted Police ship nearly sank a Native ship.

The tension increased and decreased with each fishing season. Its climax came in April 2003 when a riot broke in the port of Shippagan. Three native-owned fishing ships and a fish processing plant were burnt down. Since then, efforts are made to bring Acadians and Natives closer together and the tension slowly comes down.[11]

In popular media

  • In the Woody Allen film Annie Hall, dinner goes astray when the lobsters escape onto the kitchen floor, with one hiding behind the refrigerator. Allen quips "Maybe if I put a little dish of butter sauce here with a nutcracker, it will run out the other side.”
  • Colin van der Watt, a well-known biologist, was central in the production of "Claws and Cateracts: The Secret Life of the World's Most Fascinating Mullusk", a documentary that aired on BBC in September, 1994.
  • The 1998 Simpsons episode "Lisa Gets an 'A'" features "Pinchy," a small lobster Homer buys from the supermarket with the intent of fattening him and "eating the profits." Although Homer grows attached to his new pet a "nice, hot bath" proves Pinchy's undoing and Homer ultimately does end up eating the now much larger lobster.
  • In August 2007, The Discovery Channel aired a series entitled Lobster Wars, a documentary similar in style to their show Deadliest Catch, which follows several New England lobster boats on their fishing trips.
  • The Doris Day movie It Happened To Jane has a scene in which Jane (Day), who runs a lobster business has a conversation with a railroad tycoon (whose firm has ruined a shipment of her lobsters, costing her money) while he dissects and devours a lobster.
  • The Lucian K Truscott IV novel "Dress Gray" describes a restaurant in New Orleans, which has two lobster tanks: one contains a number of lobsters, from which customers can choose their dinner; the other contains one 31-lb lobster, believed to be over 100 years old, who is not to be eaten.
  • A Gahan Wilson cartoon shows a judge facing a defendant, whose attorney is asking for a change of venue: "Now can you see, Your Honor, why my client can't expect a fair trial in this court?" The defendant is wearing a lobster bib. The judge and jury are all human-sized lobsters.
  • There is a scene in the movie Splash in which Allen Bauer (Tom Hanks) is invited to a white tie dinner and invites (now tailless) mermaid Madison to accompany him. He is perplexed when he discovers that the main course is lobster thermidor. When it is served, Madison calmly picks up the lobster and bites through the back of its shell explaining "That's how we do it back home." No one attempts to guess the location of Madison's home.
A "furry old lobster."
  • In one section of the book of fiction, The Areas of My Expertise, "A Brief Time Line of the Lobster in America," John Hodgman tells that lobsters as we know them today were not introduced to Maine until the turn of the century, after Theodore Roosevelt built a secret canal from lobster-ridden New York City to the coast of Maine. Before that time, writes Hodgman, an entirely different animal - particularly "a kind of sea otter" - was known in Maine as the "lobster" (the photo of a European otter at right is included with the caption "Figure 11: The Lobster"). The new lobster threatened the existence of the "Old Lobster," the last of which died in 1980, in the kitchen of a Furry Old Lobster restaurant (which itself is part of a conglomeration owned by [new] lobsters).
  • Doctor Zoidberg of the animated series Futurama has lobster-like physical traits, and is called one by other characters in several instances.
  • In an episode of Seinfeld, titled The Hamptons, Kramer removes lobsters from commercial lobster traps and brings them home for dinner.

Diseases

Like all organisms, lobsters are susceptible to diseases. These can be both infectious and non-infectious. Neoplastic (cancerous) diseases of lobsters are few if any.

Paramoebiasis is an infectious disease of lobsters caused by infection with the sarcomastigophoran (amoeba) Neoparamoeba pemaquidensis. This organism also causes Amoebic Gill Disease in farmed Atlantic Salmon, Salmo salar. Infection occurs throughout the tissues, causing granuloma-like lesions, especially within the ventral nerve cord, the interstices of the hepatopancreas and the antennal gland. It is strongly suspected that paramoebiasis played a prominent role in the rapid die-off of American lobsters in Long Island Sound that occurred in the summer of 1999.

Gaffkemia or red-tail is an extremely virulent infectious disease of lobsters caused by the bacterium Aerococcus viridans. It only requires a few bacterial cells to cause death of otherwise healthy lobsters. The "red tail" common name refers to a dark orange discoloration of the ventral abdomen of affected lobsters. This is, in fact, the haemolymph or blood seen through the thin ventral arthrodial membranes. The red discoloration comes from astaxanthin, a carotenoid pigment exported to the blood during times of stress. The same sign is also seen in other diseases of lobsters and appears to be a non-specific stress response, possibly relating to the anti-oxidant and immunostimulatory properties of the astaxanthin molecule.

Systemic infections by the bacterium Vibrio fluvialis are reported to cause "limp lobster disease", wherein lobsters become lethargic and die. Limpness and lethargy is, however, a fairly common non-specific symptom of disease in lobsters.

Excretory calcinosis in American Lobsters in Long Island Sound was described from an epizootic in 2002. It is a disease that causes mineralized calculi to form in the antennal glands and gills. These cause a loss of surface area around the gills and the lobster will eventually asphyxiate. Several reasons have been proposed as to what has caused a recent outbreak of the disease. The most generally attributed factor is an increased duration of warmer temperatures in the bottom of the Long Island Sound.

References

  1. ^ "Monitoring the Offshore Lobster Fishery". Atlantic Offshore Lobstermen's Association. Retrieved 2008-08-05.
  2. ^ "Heaviest marine crustacean". Guinness World Records. Retrieved 2006-08-03.
  3. ^ "Lobster Biology: What's in a Name?". The Lobster Conservancy. Retrieved 2008-08-05.
  4. ^ Dennis Hoey (2005-05-04). "Professor finds key to rare lobster color". MaineToday.com. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  5. ^ "Man finds rare yellow lobster". local6.com. 2006-08-02. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  6. ^ Blake de Pastino (2006-07-20). "Photo in the News: Lobster Caught "Half Cooked" in Maine". National Geographic News. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  7. ^ Plenty Magazine - Environmental News and Commentary
  8. ^ Doug Fraser (2005-05-06). "Albino lobster pulled from sea". Cape Cod Times. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  9. ^ "Lobster Trap Video". University of New Hampshire.
  10. ^ "Noncommercial Lobster/Crab Harvesters". Maine Department of Marine Resources.
  11. ^ "Ceux qui Attendent", documentary by Herménégilde Chiasson (National Film Board of Canada)

Ultrastructural features of excretory calcinosis in the lobster, Homarus americanus Milne-Edwards. Excretory calcinosis: a new fatal disease of wild American lobsters Homarus americanus

External links