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What is known is that colored lobsters have shown up in greater frequency in certain areas over the years. The waters off Cutler in eastern Maine were once a hotbed for blue ones, after 1,500 larvae-sized blue lobsters were released in 1990 to use as a tracking tool to determine their survival rates, said Bob Bayer, executive director of the University of Maine's Lobster Institute. The waters off Montauk, N.Y., once had a lot of blue lobsters as well, he said, after researchers released large numbers of blue lobsters there. The bright-orange lobsters that were in Sarro's shipment are believed to have come from the same waters in Canada. Aside from their color, the lobsters are apparently normal in all other ways, Bayer said. They all turn red when they're cooked, except for the white ones since they don't have any pigment, and diners wouldn't notice a difference. "There's no difference in taste," he said. Scientists say it's possible the lobster population as a whole has a greater percentage of misfits than it did in years past. The off-colored lobsters are more susceptible to predators because they stick out more on the ocean bottom, rather than blending in like normal ones, said Diane Cowan, executive director of The Lobster Conservancy in Friendship, Maine. "But with the predator population down, notably cod, there might be greater survival rates among these color morphs that are visually easier to pick out," she said.
Lobstermen have brought Cowan countless colorful lobsters over the years. The prettiest one, she said, was pink and purple.
[Associated
Press;
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