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Rare blue lobster caught

Posted Jun 13, 2007 by  patxxoo in Environment | 8 comments | 156845 views
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This rare genetic oddity one won't be seeing a lobster pot instead he's going to live out his days in the comfort and safety of an aquarium.

The odds of ever seeing a blue lobster is a 1 in 3 million chance.
Found in New London, CT. by Steve Hatch and his uncle Robert Green Sunday morning in one of their lobster traps at the mouth of the Thames River. This bright blue lobster weighed in at 1 1/2 pounds and has a very rare genetic mutation among the species.


Another blue lobster on display at the Rhode Island Environmental Center


I've heard about them but this is the first one I've ever seen, Hatch told The Day of New London newspaper.


So instead of cooking the rare lobster, which would have turned red just as ordinary ones do while being cooked, Steve put it into a cooler and took it to the Mystic Aquarium and Institute for Exploration where it will be in an elementary school class to help children to learn about this species. He won't be alone though as they already have two other blue lobsters at the aquarium already.


On display at the Rhode Island Environmental Center


Researchers at the University of Connecticut found that the blue coloring occurs when lobsters produce an excessive amount of protein because of a genetic mutation.


Other unusual and rare lobsters include some of the following:

As reported by Brandigal the two toned lobster check out her post here




Rare yellow lobster.




Albino lobster missing one claw.


Although rare, lobsters can come in many colors. Even more rare are lobsters like this one at Sorrento Lobster Inc., which is not only multi-colored, but has both male and female sex organs.


This one has been called a lobster but I am finding that it is not truly one at all, that it is instead a species discovered in 2005 called Kiwa hirsuta that is closely related to squat lobsters and hermit crabs.


Fuzzy White Lobster
It's rare to find a completely new species, but science has done it. A new, albino, "fuzzy" lobster has been found near the heated ocean vents at the bottom of the ocean in 2005.


Something new turns up just about every day so keep a look out you just might be the next person to find that new or rare species.

More information and sources:
http://archive.dailypicture.net/rare_blue_lobster_display_audubon_society_bristol_rhode.htm
http://www.winterhbrcoop.com/Rare%20Lobster%20Collection.html
http://lobsterpot.com/lobsters.htm
http://travel.mainetoday.com/news/050404blue.shtml
http://weirdauctions.com/page/8/
article:195366:26::0
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  • avatar Posted Jun 13, 2007 by  Debra Myers (skyangel)
    #1
    I know that I have become very fascinated with all these new species of animals/aquatic life, etc. It tells me that nature must be evolving to some degree.

    Good post, patxxoo! :)
  • avatar Posted Jun 13, 2007 by  patxxoo
    #2
    Thanks, the two toned one the Brandigal posted caught my attention I though that was fascinating, and then I ran into the blue one (loved the color) and decided to see just what other colors thier were and was very surprised, that fuzzy one was really awsome to look at then I found out he wasn't a lobster at all that he's a new species, but I left him up thier anyways cause he's really different and changed my notation on him with corrected facts.
  • avatar Posted Jun 13, 2007 by  Samantha A. Torrence
    #3
    Don't forget the ever elusive ROCK LOBSTER! lol
  • avatar Posted Jun 13, 2007 by  Paul Wallis (Wanderlaugh)
    #4
    In Australia, we have a thing called a Land Yabby. It's a freshwater crayfish, blue, and leaps out and hisses at people.

    Now, if it starts collecting beer cans, and watching a lot of sport on TV, I think a genetic link can be established...

    Agree with you, Kiwa is a hermit crab morphology, at the very least. Might be a lobster that's picked up a good survival trick, of course, but it's so similar.
  • avatar Posted Jun 14, 2007 by  patxxoo
    #5
    Don't forget the ever elusive ROCK LOBSTER! lol
    good one, dang it now how could i forget that one lol

    In Australia, we have a thing called a Land Yabby. It's a freshwater crayfish, blue, and leaps out and hisses at people.

    Humm I don't think I want to meet one of those (ever) anything that leaps and hisses has just a bit more attitude than I want to run into. I could see one at a distance though a large distance that is.
    Agree with you, Kiwa is a hermit crab morphology, at the very least. Might be a lobster that's picked up a good survival trick, of course, but it's so similar.

    They find so many unique creatures around those vents, I find them intriguing just waiting to see what they will find next.
  • avatar Posted Jun 14, 2007 by  Chris V. (cgull)
    #6
    IT is real beautiful, they look they are painted in blue. Here in this article it says why the color is blue:

    Researchers at the University of Connecticut found that the blue coloring occurs when lobsters produce an excessive amount of protein because of a genetic mutation.

    But if blue lobsters are cooked like their red brethren, they too turn red, Ellis said.
  • michael critch Posted Jun 29, 2008 by  michael critch
    #7
    This is all wrong. The NOAA Aquarium at Woods Hole in Massachusetts
    has several Blue Losbsters. Lobsters become blue if they are Canables.
    If a Lobster eats another lobster it becomes blue. It is not a genetic thing at
    all. The scientists explain this clearly at Woods Hole.
  • hilaryj Posted Jul 27, 2008 by  hilaryj
    #8
    @ michael critch
    This is all wrong. The NOAA Aquarium at Woods Hole in Massachusetts
    has several Blue Losbsters. Lobsters become blue if they are Canables.
    If a Lobster eats another lobster it becomes blue. It is not a genetic thing at
    all. The scientists explain this clearly at Woods Hole.


    directly from the Woods Hole website:
    "The blue lobsters are genetic mutations. The shell is the only part that is blue; the meat is not. Blue lobsters taste the same as any other lobsters."
    no mention of cannibalism whatsoever.

    http://www.nefsc.noaa.gov/nefsc/aquarium/FAQs/TouchTankFAQ

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