
Females reach sexual maturity at 2 1/2 years of age, males at 3. After mating, a large female lobster can produce thousands of eggs, which she will carry around for up to 9 months. The eggs are attached to the hairs of the pleopods (illustration, a), the swimming legs found on the abdomen. The four pairs of front legs are used for walking, cleaning, excavating, catching prey, etc. While being carried around on the pleopods, the eggs hatch into prelarvae, and the female eventually releases them into the currents. Free swimming larvae, called zoeas, undergo various stages (illustration, I, II, III, IV), molting between each one, to turn into tiny replicas of adult lobsters (illustration, b). During the IV stage, zoeas start settling on the bottom and occupy burrows previously excavated by adults. They'll remain inside them for about a year to escape predators.
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