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An American lobster on a rocky seabed facing the camera, showing its two large claws and long antennae. Real photograph
Real photograph Photo by Derek Keats on Pexels · Pexels License

Lobster

Homarus americanus

say it LOB-ster

Why we love them

The American lobster lives on the cool, rocky seabed of the Atlantic Ocean, along the coast of North America. It has a hard shell, a long body, and ten legs. The front two legs are big claws that it uses to catch food and to hold on to things.

Its two claws are not the same. One is a chunky crusher claw, strong enough to crack open shells. The other is a slimmer claw with a fine edge for tearing softer food. With them the lobster hunts mussels, clams, snails, crabs and small fish along the bottom of the sea.

Many people think lobsters are bright red, but a live one usually is not. In the water most American lobsters are a greenish-brown colour that helps them hide among the rocks. They only turn red after they are cooked. Now and then a very rare lobster is born bright blue instead.

A lobster wears its skeleton on the outside, like a suit of armour. To grow bigger, it must wriggle out of its old shell and grow a fresh, larger one. It does this many times as it gets older. Lobsters can live a surprisingly long time, and scientists believe some may reach about a hundred years old.

People catch American lobsters for food, so fishers and scientists work together to look after them. They set rules about which lobsters may be kept and return egg-carrying mothers to the sea. This care helps keep plenty of lobsters living along the coast.

My home

Ocean, rocky seabed, coastal waters

Where I live

Atlantic Ocean

What I eat

Mussels, clams, snails, crabs, sea stars, small fish

How heavy I am

20 kg

How long I live

100 years

A lobster has two different claws — a big crusher claw and a finer claw for tearing food.

Live lobsters are usually greenish-brown; they only turn bright red after being cooked.

Lobsters can live a very long time, and scientists think some reach about 100 years old.

Every lobster can feel happy, scared and loved — just like you.

Looking after my friends

Doing well

There are lots of these animals in the wild right now. That is good news!

You can help by learning their names, keeping wild places clean, and telling someone why this animal matters.

Official status: least concern (IUCN)

Where this came from