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Blue Lobster Factoids
|
|
Origin
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Northeast Mexico and southern USA and
New York
|
|
Maximum
Size
|
Four or five
inches plus claws
-- really long claws
|
|
Longevity
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Five years
|
|
Housing
|
Likes space but will hide under a rock or log
|
|
Security
|
Hides during day. More active at night.
|
|
Temperature
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Room
temp fine. Breeds faster when warmer.
|
|
Breeding |
Lays eggs in the fall |
|
Attitude
|
Argumentative but shy burrower
|
|
Foods
|
Devours
plants. Flake and pellet foods fine.
|
|
Water
|
Likes
clean, hard water
|
|
Tough |
Tolerates dry periods and salt in the water |
|
Threats
|
Herons, bullfrogs, turtles, big fish, Cajuns, each other
|
Prologue: Way last century I
was touring a series of Florida fish farms along with several dozen other
fish retailers. A fun trip, if I may say so myself. One of the
farms we toured had at least one rearing pond filled with bright, shiny blue
crayfish -- very impressive when seined out in the warm Florida sun.
Later, on the way to another fish farm, some of us debated whether blue
crayfish eat fish or not. We disagreed. We compromised and
decided there are some strains that eat fish and some that don't. I've
taken a new tack and decided there are some that eat fish and some that eat
a lot of fish. Even the little guys will eat fish. And they all
eat plants. They are crayfish -- even the ones called blue
lobsters.
LA
Blue crayfish cost way more than plain ol' crayfish. Why?
They're prettier.
LA
LA
10 legs (counting pincers) just like any other crayfish..
Male. A blue male would have the same graspers there below his feet.
Same on all colors.
LA
Blue crayfish are a rich blue -- especially right after molting.
LA
Sold to us as a blue lobster. Sometimes they're one and the same
thing.
LA
Also sold to us as a blue lobster. Later on I'll tell you how to make
a blue crayfish.
LA
Iowa crayfish captured in a pond six blocks down the hill from
Aqualand.
LA
Here's another bluish-looking regular ol' Iowa crawdaddy looking like a blue
crayfish.
LA
Australian blue yabbie -- formidable pincers. Absolutely a fish eater.
LA
Tell me those pincers don't catch fish.
LA
Don't try this unless your blue lobster has just shed his carapace. Still a bit
squishy on the side.
LA
LA
LA
LA
LA
Last Words: I've seen quite a few
different blue crayfish and blue lobsters in my day. I like them all.
I've even made some. If you soak a recently molted (soft shelled)
crayfish in a small container of water with several drops of methylene blue,
it will turn blue as its shell hardens. It loses the blue when it
molts, of course, but what the heck. Still, I wouldn't mix them with
any fish I wanted to keep. Blue crayfish (and any other crayfish) are
very adept at catching fish when the lights are off and the fish hit the
bottom. LA
© 2011
LA Productions
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