The Secret Life of Lobsters (4 page)

BOOK: The Secret Life of Lobsters
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By the age of twenty-one, Jack was back on Little Cranberry Island and ready for a job as sternman with Warren Fernald. During his first week aboard the
Mother Ann,
Jack stood by with a can of claw plugs when each trap broke the surface. Often the traps were loaded with lobsters flapping their tails. Warren would open the trap and reach among the snapping pincers. He tossed most of the animals overboard without a second glance. Several he kept only long enough to slap a brass ruler on their backs before throwing them back into the water too.

The trap would be empty and Jack would have yet to change the bait. He would hurry to unwind the spent bag and hang a fresh bundle of herring in the trap. Warren would tie the door shut and shove the trap overboard. After an hour of this routine Jack would steal a glance in the barrel of keepers. More often than not, he could still see the bottom of the barrel. Warren threw more lobsters overboard with each trap he hauled.

“This is nuts,” Jack said under his breath. Another trap came over the rail, full of shiny lobsters that would go back into the sea.

“Too bad we can't just keep all these,” Jack muttered.

Warren thought for a minute.

“You want to be a lobsterman?” Warren asked.

“I don't know. Yeah, maybe.”

“You want to keep on lobstering after you start?”

“Yeah, sure.”

“Well, you can't catch everything and expect it to continue,” Warren said, turning the brass ruler over in his hands. The ruler, which lobstermen called the “gauge,” enforced a minimum-size law that had been in effect in Maine since 1895. “Throw back more than you catch and, why, there's always going to be something there tomorrow.”

As if to punctuate his point, later in the string of traps Warren turned a female lobster on her back and showed her to Jack. Glued to the underside of her tail were thousands of pine green eggs. Warren reached for his fish knife and cut a quarter-inch triangle out of the lobster's tail flipper, then slid her back into the sea. He had just marked her as a breeder by bestowing her with a “V-notch,” so-called because the triangular cut was shaped like a V. If caught again, the lobster would be illegal to sell whether she was carrying eggs or not.

Jack was getting used to the idea of returning “shorts,” “eggers,” and “V-notchers” to the sea when a trap came over the rail containing a mammoth lobster that could have crushed a man's wrist in its claws.

“Now, that's a handsome fellow,” Warren said, noting the more muscular claws and narrower tail that indicated a male. Females have wider tails to accommodate their eggs.

With a couple of skillful tugs Warren extracted the creature and held it up for admiration. Then he dropped the lobster overboard with a splash. Jack leaned over the rail and glimpsed the animal pulsing its tail and retreating into the depths.

“Too big,” Warren said. In addition to a minimum size, his brass ruler delineated a maximum size, another law that Maine had pioneered, in 1933.

“The oversize lobsters are our brood stock,” Warren explained. “We protect the big males so they can mate with the
big V-notched females that produce the eggs.”

Warren hauled up another trap and found a female without eggs. But close examination revealed the remnant of a nick in her tail.

“A notcher that's shed her old shell,” Warren said, showing the lobster to Jack. “You almost can't make out the notch anymore.” Warren cut her a new notch before tossing her overboard.

He wasn't just trying to repopulate the waters around Little Cranberry with lobsters. By now Warren and Ann had six children. Their sons were joining the ranks of the island's lobstermen, and Warren had taught them how to protect lobster eggs just as he was teaching Jack. If Jack's interest took root, there might be another lobsterman living on the island, one more steward for Little Cranberry's female lobsters.

Jack stuffed another bag with bait. He looked up from the tub of putrid herring and gazed at the sparkling waves lapping at the edge of the island. Warren's lessons on lobster fertility had sparked in him a new appreciation for the possibilities of procreation.

“There's a future here,” Jack whispered.

P
a's Pride
was a creaky little boat. Bruce Fernald nudged her throttle to speed up the hydraulic trap-hauler and prayed she'd hold together. The boat had been Warren's when Bruce was a boy. A year had passed since Bruce had returned to Little Cranberry Island from the navy, and he supposed it was appropriate that now, as the eldest son, he was the boat's captain. But mostly the name
Pa's Pride
reminded Bruce that he was twenty-three years old and six thousand dollars in debt. No one was going to be proud of him if he didn't start catching some lobsters.

Just trying to keep
Pa's Pride
in one piece was hard enough. A storm had bombarded the harbor with screaming winds, and
Pa's Pride
had broken loose from her mooring. She'd banged up against the wharf, and Bruce had smashed open a dock window in the attempt to jump aboard and save her. For fear of being pulverized between the boat's hull and the wharf pilings, he'd given up and waited for her to slip ashore instead. With help from Jack Merrill and several other lobstermen, Bruce had dragged
Pa's Pride
up the beach with an old backhoe.

Saving the boat would have been pointless, though, if Bruce's traps came up empty. Bruce had dropped these traps overboard a week ago. He'd watched the stylus on the old-fashioned Fathometer burn a squiggly line onto a rolling sheet of paper like a lie detector. If the Fathometer told the truth, then the traps should have sunk into a muddy canyon. Bruce had gambled that lobsters would be migrating through it on their way offshore.

Outwitting the lobsters was only part of the battle. A good-natured competition simmered between Bruce and two of his younger brothers. Mark Fernald and Dan Fernald were the kind of island boys who looked naked without a lobster trap in their hands. When Mark was but a baby, his first encounter with lobsters had been life-threatening. When the lobsters Warren had brought home for dinner started to boil, steam wafted around the kitchen. Mark screamed and stopped breathing, his throat constricted by swelling. He suffered from a rare allergic reaction to proteins in lobster muscle and would never taste a lobster in his life.

That didn't stop Mark from setting out to catch more lobsters than any Fernald in the history of Little Cranberry. By the age of twelve he was hauling five traps from a rowboat. He found a sixth trap washed up on the beach, which he dragged home, repaired, and carted down to the harbor in a wheelbarrow. He hung a bait bag full of herring inside, rowed a quarter mile from shore, tied a buoy onto the buoy line, and slid the trap overboard. As he watched it sink he wondered why the buoy and line had stayed aboard the boat, then realized he'd forgotten to tie the line to the trap. Mark went on to amass hundreds of traps and it was a mistake he would rarely repeat. He was always curious to see what his traps would haul up, and he frequently shifted his gear around to test different types of terrain. One year Mark built a trap the size of a small car just to see what it would catch. It was so big that to complete its construction Mark had to climb inside the trap himself.

Dan was eager to pit his skills against the sea too, and by the age of seventeen was lobstering from an eighteen-foot boat. Bruce was still in the navy when Dan bought
Pa's Pride
from Warren, in April of Dan's senior year in high school. The evening he graduated, Dan went straight to bed so he could rise at 4:00
A.M
. to haul his traps. Aboard
Pa's Pride
Dan developed a lightning-fast hand. With only a few flicks of the wrist Dan could empty a trap, rebait it, and set it back over the side before the boat drifted off target. Hitting the sweet spots on the
bottom was an art, and all the Fernald boys dreamed of matching the uncanny talent of a man named Lee Ham.

When Lee Ham went lobstering it was almost as if he were making love to Mother Nature. Lee had a knack for planting his traps in the depressions in the seafloor, where lobsters liked to hide and hunt. He called these spots his honey holes. He caught the most lobsters of any of the Little Cranberry fishermen, and he made a profit on everyone else's lobsters because he owned the dock where the fishermen sold their catch. Warren and his Fernald cousins sometimes traded their knowledge of the bottom, but Lee kept his honey holes to himself. It was said that he knew every pebble in the shallows around the island and every boulder offshore. Lee would steer his boat in among the rocks by the beach, propeller churning just above the stones, and set his gear so close to the lobsters' hiding places that they had little choice but to enter his traps. He would steam far from land and drop his traps offshore with eerie precision, making rows of pit stops on the lobster highways of the deep.

What the Fernald boys couldn't match in their knowledge of honey holes, Mark made up for with sheer ambition and Dan with speed. Both prospered, and soon Dan needed a bigger boat. He'd heard about a new kind of material called fiberglass. In 1974, at the age of nineteen, Dan ordered a hull fashioned from the stuff and christened her
Wind Song
. She cost as much as a house.

“What if something aboard her needs fixing?” one of the old-timers asked Dan. “Where the hell are you going to drive a nail in her if she's made of plastic? You paid forty thousand dollars for a goddamn Clorox bottle.”

Dan smiled because his boat would never need caulking, sanding, or painting. He kept hauling like lightning and sold
Pa's Pride
to Bruce. Now Bruce needed a few honey holes of his own.

 

Bruce had figured out the basics. Most adult lobsters around Little Cranberry Island spent the winter hunkered down
twenty miles from shore, on the mud plains two hundred to three hundred feet underwater. It was so cold that they didn't move around much, but they were warmer there than near shore, where winter's bitter winds cooled the shallows quickly.

Come spring, the sun warmed the surface of the sea and the lobsters set out toward land. At the edge of the mudflats they probed for the fingers of rocky ledge that rose toward the Cranberry Isles like mountain ridges rising from the desert. Between the ledges were silt-bottomed canyons that wound toward the islands. But with the surface waters warming, the lobsters mostly avoided the canyons and sought hard rock and altitude. When they hit the rocky slopes they clambered up toward ridges that would take them higher still, and closer to the realm of men.

About five miles from Little Cranberry the lobsters cleared a lip of ledge and emerged onto a boulder-strewn plateau. After their steep ascent, they walked at a more relaxed pace, doing most of their moving at night and sheltering themselves in crevices by day. They'd risen to a depth of eighty or ninety feet, where the terrain, though flat, was littered with rocks that tested their ability to detour without straying off course. The lobsters paid little attention to the inhabitants they passed—sea urchins, starfish, snails, and sea cucumbers. Occasionally the lobsters hunted down one of these creatures for a meal on the road, but they were intent on covering ground. They seldom paused, even for the bait in a lobsterman's trap. The warmth of the islands beckoned.

The plateau ended abruptly. The lobsters crossed a trough of gravel and drew up against another steep rise. They gripped the craggy slope with their four pairs of legs and scrambled upward again, the water growing warmer as they drew closer to the sun. They were in the home stretch now—sixty feet deep, then fifty, then forty. The incline flattened and the lobsters began to sway with the swells rolling toward the beach. For the first time in months they basked in the heat of the shallows.

Having mounted the rocky table that formed the
Cranberry Isles, many of the lobsters made their way into a mile-wide cove surrounded on three sides by islands. If the lobsters had continued straight ahead, they would have emerged onto the gray cobble beach of Little Cranberry's seaward shore and climbed into the grass and up into the woods. Bruce, in his sleep, sometimes saw them there, hordes marching up the hill. He dreamed of setting his traps in the island's streambeds and in the drainage ditches along the road so he could catch them before they reached town.

In reality the lobsters stopped and fanned out to find hiding places in the glacial debris underwater. Scurrying among the rocks, the lobsters sought the warmest nooks they could find, sometimes just fifteen or twenty feet below the crashing surf. The lobsters had good reason to secure hiding places. By now it was early summer, and in the warm water their shells had begun to loosen.

A lobster's shell gives the animal all of its rigidity. Under the shell, the lobster is little more than jelly-soft flesh and floppy organs. The problem with this arrangement is that the lobster is constantly growing, while its shell is fixed in size. To get bigger a lobster must literally burst its seams, escape its old shell, and expose its vulnerable inner self to the hungry world while it constructs a new shell large enough to allow its body to expand.

The shell is composed of three layers. The outermost is a thin covering of proteins, lipids, and calcium salts. Underneath is a thicker matrix of proteins and the horny substance known as chitin, the same material that forms the exoskeletons of insects, as well as of arachnids like spiders and scorpions. The third layer is thicker still, and consists of a rigid, calcified outer portion that becomes softer toward the inner surface, like a suit of armor lined with padding. Underneath is a protective membrane, and finally the lobster's delicate skin.

If a lobster's bodily functions went unregulated, the animal would be in a constant state of shedding its shell and growing a new one. Such exhibitionism would make normal life impossible, so lobsters have glands inside the stalks of their eyes that
release a hormone that inhibits molting. A combination of cues, including warming temperatures and longer days, constrains the production of the hormone and releases steroids that begin the molt cycle. Proof of the hormone's importance can easily be obtained, though the experiment is somewhat sadistic: cutting off the lobster's eyes induces the animal to shed its shell almost immediately.

In the weeks prior to molting, the lobster's skin cells enlarge and secrete the beginnings of an entirely new shell underneath the old one. Meanwhile, calcium drains out of the old shell and accumulates in a pair of bulbous reservoirs on either side of the stomach called gastroliths, to be recycled later.

When the lobster is ready to shed, it pumps in seawater and distributes it through its body, causing hydrostatic pressure to force the old shell away from the new one. The lobster remains mobile and active until the last minute, when the membrane that lines its old shell bursts and the animal falls over on its side, helpless and immobilized. After twenty minutes or so, the lobster's back detaches and the animal pulls its antennae, mouthparts, legs, and claws out of their former coverings, aided by a lubricating fluid. The most difficult moment comes when the lobster tugs its claw muscles out through the slender upper segments that form its wrists. Before molting the animal must diet away half the mass in its claws or risk getting stuck in its old clothes. Worse, because a lobster is an invertebrate, every anatomic feature that is rigid is part of the exoskeleton, including the teeth inside the stomach that grind food. The lobster must rip out the lining of its throat, stomach, and anus before it is free of the old shell. Some die trying.

When the lining of the stomach comes out, the gastroliths, containing the calcium reserves, are released. The lobster immediately digests the gastroliths to recycle some of the rigidity of its old shell. Centuries ago, gastroliths from lobsters and crayfish were commonly ingested by humans as medicine. In the 1700s, apothecary shops throughout the Russian Empire sold the little white balls to dissolve kidney stones, heal eye
inflammation, and cure epilepsy. Gastroliths were collected from crayfish by catching thousands of the animals in the summertime, dumping them into pits, crushing them, and letting them decompose over the winter—the stench was said to be horrendous. In the spring the mess was washed down and the gastroliths sorted out with sieves. Demand for the medicine was so strong that fakes, formed from chalk, were common. For a molting lobster the gastroliths have a specific function. Their calcium bypasses most of the new shell and goes directly to harden the tips of the legs and the cutting edges of the mouthparts—the appendages critical for feeding.

Flexing the muscles of its abdomen, the lobster shakes off the old shell around its tail and is free. Again the lobster pumps itself full of water and expands, rapidly outstripping its former size. Soon it is able to stand, and its first priority is to use its newly rigid mouthparts to devour the husk of its former self, a convenient and nutritious source of additional calcium. What the lobster doesn't finish of its old shell it buries, perhaps to hide evidence of its weakness.

The minerals and nutrients the lobster absorbs are secreted throughout the new shell, which over the next few days thickens enough to allow the flesh underneath to shrink back to its actual size, making space for future growth.

The lobster has gained 15 percent in body length and 50 percent in volume. In the first five years of life lobsters undergo this hazardous routine about twenty-five times. In adolescence the rate decreases to about twice a year. Lobsters that have reached adulthood molt once a year on average, and increasingly seldom as they grow larger. Exactly how often, though, is difficult to calculate, because determining the age of a wild lobster has so far proved impossible. A fish contains a chronological record of its life in its otolith, a bone inside the brain cavity that grows in concentric layers like the rings of a tree. But lobsters are invertebrates. They toss their exoskeletons off with such maddening thoroughness that all trace of their age is erased.

Bruce once saw a lobster molt aboard his boat. The lobster
had mistaken a trap for a sanctuary and let its shell loosen, only to be hauled up after it was too late. Bruce slid the lobster into a bucket of seawater and watched its shell open. With heroic patience and some spasmodic flailing the lobster extracted itself and emerged wrinkled and soft as Jell-O. But by the end of the day it had restored its shape and grown larger. Coating its skin was a crinkly shell the consistency of cling wrap.

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