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  2. American lobster - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_lobster

    [32] [33] Yellow and orange lobsters are typically placed into aquariums, as predators can easily spot them if they are released back into the wild. [20] [34] The odds of catching a yellow lobster stand at 1 in 30 million. [35] Split 1 in 50 million Several lobsters have been caught that show a different color on the left and right side of the ...

  3. Lobster - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lobster

    Lobster is fished in water between 2 and 900 metres (1 and 500 fathoms), although some lobsters live at 3,700 metres (2,000 fathoms). Cages are of plastic-coated galvanized steel or wood. A lobster fisher may tend to as many as 2,000 traps. Around the year 2000, owing to overfishing and high demand, lobster aquaculture expanded. [86]

  4. Panulirus argus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panulirus_argus

    Panulirus argus, the Caribbean spiny lobster, [2] is a species of spiny lobster that lives on reefs and in mangrove swamps in the western Atlantic Ocean. Anatomy [ edit ]

  5. Rare yellow lobster makes headlines for unique rescue story - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2014-08-01-rare-yellow-lobster...

    A rare lobster was saved from its likely fate in a boiling pot of water after it was spotted in a Publix grocery story in Florida. It was a yellow lobster, something The University of Maine ...

  6. Rare yellow lobster avoids boiling pot - AOL

    www.aol.com/2010/08/02/rare-yellow-lobster...

    A lobsterman caught a 1 in 30 million yellow lobster last week in Narragansett Bay's East Passage off the coast of Newport, R.I., and this one will be avoiding a steamy fate. "I thought, holy cow ...

  7. Panulirus ornatus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panulirus_ornatus

    Panulirus ornatus (known by a number of common names, including tropical rock lobster, [3] [4] ornate rock lobster, [5] ornate spiny lobster [2] and ornate tropical rock lobster [6]) is a large spiny lobster with 11 larval stages.

  8. Slipper lobster - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slipper_lobster

    A number of common names have been applied to the family Scyllaridae. The most common of these is "slipper lobster", [2] [6] followed by "shovel-nosed lobster" [14] and "locust lobster". "Spanish lobster" is used for members of the genus Arctides, [15] "mitten lobster" for Parribacus, [16] and "fan lobster" for Evibacus [17] and Ibacus. [18]

  9. Spiny lobster - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spiny_lobster

    While a number of insects use frictional vibration mechanisms to generate sound, this particular acoustic mechanism is unique in the animal kingdom. Significantly, the system does not rely on the hardness of the exoskeleton, as many other arthropod sounds do, meaning that the spiny lobsters can continue to produce the deterrent noises even in ...