Homarus


Homarus is a genus of lobsters, which include the common and commercially significant species Homarus americanus and Homarus gammarus. The Cape lobster, which was formerly in this genus as H. capensis, was moved in 1995 to the new genus Homarinus.

Description

Homarus is one of three extant genera of clawed lobsters to show dimorphism between claws – a specialisation into a crushing claw and a cutting claw. The other similar genera are Nephrops, which is much more slender, and has grooves along the claws and the abdomen, and Homarinus, the Cape lobster from South Africa, which is even smaller, and has hairy claws.
While analyses of morphology suggest a close relationship between Homarinus and Homarus, molecular analyses using mitochondrial DNA reveal that they are not sister taxa. Both genera lack ornamentation such as spines and :wikt:carina|carinae, but are thought to have reached that state independently, through convergent evolution. The closest living relative of Homarus is Nephrops norvegicus, while the closest relatives of Homarinus are Thymops and Thymopides.

Species

Eight extinct species are known from the fossil record, which stretches back to the Cretaceous, but only two species survive. These two species, the American lobster and the European lobster, are very similar and may have speciated as recently as the Pleistocene, during climatic fluctuations. The best characters for distinguishing them are the geographic distribution, with the American lobster in the western Atlantic and the European lobster in the eastern Atlantic, and by the presence of one or more teeth on the underside of the rostrum in H. americanus but not in H. gammarus.
ImageScientific nameCommon NameDescriptionDistribution
Homarus gammarus Linnaeus, 1758European lobster or common lobstermay grow to a length of and a mass of, and bears a conspicuous pair of claws. In life, the lobsters are most of the time blue, only becoming "lobster red" on cooking. Homarus gammarus is a highly esteemed food, and is widely caught using lobster pots,Mostly around the British Isles.
Homarus americanus H. Milne-Edwards, 1837Atlantic lobster, Canadian lobster, true lobster, northern lobster, Canadian Reds, or Maine lobster.commonly ranges from in length and in weight, but have been known to reach lengths of and weigh as much as or more, making this the heaviest marine crustacean in the world. An average adult is about long and weighs.Atlantic coast of North America, from Labrador in the north to Cape Hatteras, North Carolina in the south

Fossil species

The boundaries between Homarus and the extinct genus Hoploparia are unclear, and some species, such as Hoploparia benedeni have been transferred between the two genera. Eight species have been assigned to Homarus from the fossil record. They are:
The two extant species of Homarus are both found in the North Atlantic Ocean. H. americanus is found from Labrador to North Carolina in the western North Atlantic, while H. gammarus is found from Arctic Norway to Morocco, including the British Isles and the Mediterranean Sea.

Life cycle

in Homarus is complex and is accompanied by a number of courtship behaviours. Males build mating shelters or burrows, and larger males can attract more females, producing a polygynous mating system. A few days before moulting, a female will choose a mate, and will remain in his shelter until the moult. The male will then insert a spermatophore into the female's seminal vesicle, where it may be stored for several years. The eggs of Homarus species are laid in the autumn, being fertilised externally as they exit, and are carried by the female on her pleopods.
The eggs generally hatch in the spring as a pre-larva, which rapidly develops into the first larval phase. This is followed by three zoeal phases, the total duration of which can vary from two weeks to two months, depending on the temperature. At the following moult, the young animal becomes a post-larva, with a gross form resembling the adult lobster. Although it can swim, using its pleopods, the post-larva soon settles to the bottom and lives as a juvenile for 3–5 years.
As adults, Homarus species moult increasingly infrequently. The size at sexual maturity varies with temperature; it is around for female H. americanus in southern New England, but around the Bay of Fundy. In H. gammarus, the size at sexual maturity is less well defined, but is in the range.