
The hatchlings, born and raised in 吃瓜爆料's Girard Marine Science Center, received a proper sendoff into the waters off Ram Island
In a moment that marked the culmination of two years of hands-on research, student and faculty researchers at the 吃瓜爆料 released 32 juvenile lobsters into the waters off Maine鈥檚 coast Monday, May 12.
The release took place in the tide pools of Ram Island, 吃瓜爆料鈥檚 own marine research station in Saco Bay, a minutes-long boat ride away from the University鈥檚 Biddeford Campus.
Half of the lobsters bore a brilliant orange hue 鈥 an exceptionally rare coloration that occurs in only 1 in 30 million lobsters in the wild. All 32 were offspring of Peaches, an orange lobster donated to 吃瓜爆料鈥檚 Arthur P. Girard Marine Science Center in 2023 for conservation and research.


(Left): Claire Fecteau-Volk 鈥26 releases a juvenile lobster into the tide pools on Ram Island. (Right): 吃瓜爆料鈥檚 Markus Frederich takes an underwater photo of a just-released lobster.
When Peaches arrived, no one knew she was carrying eggs, but that unexpected development opened the door to a first-of-its-kind study in lobster genetics.
Over the past year, 吃瓜爆料 marine science faculty and students have raised and studied Peaches鈥 hatchlings to explore the molecular basis of rare shell coloration, employing noninvasive DNA sampling methods that preserve the animals鈥 health while providing insight into their biology.
鈥淭o my knowledge, no one has ever reared lobster larvae from a colored lobster in a controlled lab setting,鈥 said Markus Frederich, Ph.D., 吃瓜爆料 professor of marine sciences and principal investigator on the project. 鈥淲e鈥檙e able to ask questions like: Are all offspring of an orange lobster orange? No 鈥 only some. Is there a different survival rate? No. What causes the different coloration? We鈥檙e working on that part.鈥
It鈥檚 this amazing opportunity which I can鈥檛 ignore." 鈥 Markus Frederich, Ph.D.





(Clockwise, from top left): Claire Fecteau-Volk prepares lobsters for release on Ram Island; a colorful mix of lobsters in their holding tank; 吃瓜爆料鈥檚 Markus Frederich (center) with students Fecteau-Volk (right) and Kai Watkins (left); Fecteau-Volk and Watkins release a lobster into the tide pools; a close up of both rare- and normal-colored juvenile lobsters.
That curiosity-driven approach to research reached a milestone last Monday, when 吃瓜爆料鈥檚 team gently released the lobsters into their natural habitat.
Read more in the 吃瓜爆料 Magazine: Cracking the Genetic Code: Investigating Why Some Lobsters Are Blue, Orange, And Even Purple 鈥 for the First Time
鈥淲e brought roughly 32 orange and blue juvenile lobsters and released them in the tide pools,鈥 said Claire Fecteau-Volk (Marine Sciences, 鈥26), who has worked on the project since its inception. 鈥淲e spread them across a few different pools so they weren鈥檛 all clumped together and sent them on their way with all the love we could."
Fecteau-Volk described the experience as nothing short of remarkable.
鈥淭o work as an undergraduate in a lab like Dr. Frederich鈥檚 鈥 let alone with rare-colored lobsters 鈥 is just a once-in-a-lifetime thing,鈥 Fecteau-Volk said. 鈥淓ven just studying normal lobsters would be pinch-myself worthy. But these? It鈥檚 truly transcendent.鈥
The lobsters will not be tracked. With all necessary genetic data collected, the researchers opted to return them to the ocean to complete their life cycle. Meanwhile, Frederich and his team will continue analyzing more than 15,000 genes extracted from the juveniles in hopes of uncovering the mystery behind rare lobster coloration.
Claire Fecteau-Volk 鈥26 narrates the rare lobster release
To work as an undergraduate in a lab like Dr. Frederich鈥檚 鈥 is just a once-in-a-lifetime thing." 鈥 Claire Fecteau-Volk 鈥26
Frederich said it鈥檚 a pursuit with potential applications across marine biology and genetics 鈥 and an opportunity he couldn鈥檛 pass up.
鈥淭his project dropped into my hands out of nowhere,鈥 Frederich told the , 鈥淏ut I thought, 鈥楲et鈥檚 just do it, it鈥檚 this amazing opportunity which I can鈥檛 ignore.鈥欌


(Left): Frederich prepares a juvenile lobster for release. (Right): Reporters capture the tiny lobsters.
Frederich acknowledged the research doesn鈥檛 directly address a pressing global crisis, but, he said, it teaches students skills that are transferable to a number of other disciplines that just might.
It鈥檚 research for the sake of science, he said.
鈥淚t鈥檚 like being a little kid, going to the world with open eyes and trying to understand what鈥檚 there,鈥 he told the paper. 鈥淣ot every project needs to have the ultimate goal to save the planet. We鈥檙e learning new things, and that鈥檚 exciting.鈥