Current:Home > ContactJust how rare is a rare-colored lobster? Scientists say answer could be under the shell -CoinMarket
Just how rare is a rare-colored lobster? Scientists say answer could be under the shell
View
Date:2025-04-16 19:03:28
BIDDEFORD, Maine (AP) — Orange, blue, calico, two-toned and ... cotton-candy colored?
Those are all the hues of lobsters that have showed up in fishers’ traps, supermarket seafood tanks and scientists’ laboratories over the last year. The funky-colored crustaceans inspire headlines that trumpet their rarity, with particularly uncommon baby blue-tinted critters described by some as “cotton-candy colored” often estimated at 1 in 100 million.
A recent wave of these curious colored lobsters in Maine, New York, Colorado and beyond has scientists asking just how atypical the discolored arthropods really are. As is often the case in science, it’s complicated.
Lobsters’ color can vary due to genetic and dietary differences, and estimates about how rare certain colors are should be taken with a grain of salt, said Andrew Goode, lead administrative scientist for the American Lobster Settlement Index at the University of Maine. There is also no definitive source on the occurrence of lobster coloration abnormalities, scientists said.
“Anecdotally, they don’t taste any different either,” Goode said.
In the wild, lobsters typically have a mottled brown appearance, and they turn an orange-red color after they are boiled for eating. Lobsters can have color abnormalities due to mutation of genes that affect the proteins that bind to their shell pigments, Goode said.
The best available estimates about lobster coloration abnormalities are based on data from fisheries sources, said marine sciences professor Markus Frederich of the University of New England in Maine. However, he said, “no one really tracks them.”
Frederich and other scientists said that commonly cited estimates such as 1 in 1 million for blue lobsters and 1 in 30 million for orange lobsters should not be treated as rock-solid figures. However, he and his students are working to change that.
Frederich is working on noninvasive ways to extract genetic samples from lobsters to try to better understand the molecular basis for rare shell coloration. Frederich maintains a collection of strange-colored lobsters at the university’s labs and has been documenting the progress of the offspring of an orange lobster named Peaches who is housed at the university.
Peaches had thousands of offspring this year, which is typical for lobsters. About half were orange, which is not, Frederich said. Of the baby lobsters that survived, a slight majority were regular colored ones, Frederich said.
Studying the DNA of atypically colored lobsters will give scientists a better understanding of their underlying genetics, Frederich said.
“Lobsters are those iconic animals here in Maine, and I find them beautiful. Especially when you see those rare ones, which are just looking spectacular. And then the scientist in me simply says I want to know how that works. What’s the mechanism?” Frederich said.
He does eat lobster but “never any of those colorful ones,” he said.
One of Frederich’s lobsters, Tamarind, is the typical color on one side and orange on the other. That is because two lobster eggs fused and grew as one animal, Frederich said. He said that’s thought to be as rare as 1 in 50 million.
Rare lobsters have been in the news lately, with an orange lobster turning up in a Long Island, New York, Stop & Shop last month, and another appearing in a shipment being delivered to a Red Lobster in Colorado in July.
The odd-looking lobsters will likely continue to come to shore because of the size of the U.S. lobster fishery, said Richard Wahle, a longtime University of Maine lobster researcher who is now retired. U.S. fishers have brought more than 90 million pounds (40,820 metric tons) of lobster to the docks in every year since 2009 after only previously reaching that volume twice, according to federal records that go back to 1950.
“In an annual catch consisting of hundreds of millions of lobster, it shouldn’t be surprising that we see a few of the weird ones every year, even if they are 1 in a million or 1 in 30 million,” Wahle said.
veryGood! (58382)
Related
- Paige Bueckers vs. Hannah Hidalgo highlights women's basketball games to watch
- Residents are ready to appeal after a Georgia railroad company got approval to forcibly buy land
- Dick Cheney will back Kamala Harris, his daughter says
- Sports betting firm bet365 fined $33K for taking bets after outcomes were known
- Trump issues order to ban transgender troops from serving openly in the military
- John Travolta and Kelly Preston’s Daughter Ella Honors Her Late Mom With Deeply Personal Song
- August jobs report: Economy added disappointing 142,000 jobs as unemployment fell to 4.2%
- LL Flooring, formerly Lumber Liquidators, is going out of business and closing all of its stores
- Sam Taylor
- Jessica Pegula will meet Aryna Sabalenka in the US Open women’s final Saturday
Ranking
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Man charged with plotting shooting at a New York Jewish center on anniversary of Oct. 7 Hamas attack
- Investigators say Wisconsin inmate killed his cellmate for being Black and gay
- North Carolina court orders RFK Jr.'s name to be removed just before ballots are sent
- North Carolina trustees approve Bill Belichick’s deal ahead of introductory news conference
- 'National Geographic at my front door': Watch runaway emu stroll through neighborhood
- Space crash: New research suggests huge asteroid shifted Jupiter's moon Ganymede on its axis
- Apalachee High School shooting suspect and father appear in court: Live updates
Recommendation
Paris Hilton, Nicole Richie return for an 'Encore,' reminisce about 'The Simple Life'
'Sopranos' creator talks new documentary, why prequel movie wasn't a 'cash grab'
'A great day for Red Lobster': Company exiting bankruptcy, will operate 544 locations
Hundreds of places in the US said racism was a public health crisis. What’s changed?
Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
Man charged with plotting shooting at a New York Jewish center on anniversary of Oct. 7 Hamas attack
Police say the gunman killed in Munich had fired at the Israeli Consulate
Dick Cheney will back Kamala Harris, his daughter says