Norway lobster

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Norway lobster

Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Subphylum: Crustacea
Class: Malacostraca
Order: Decapoda
Infraorder: Astacidea
Family: Nephropidae
Genus: Nephrops[1]
Leach, 1814
Species: N. norvegicus
Binomial name
Nephrops norvegicus
(Linnaeus, 1758)

The Norway lobster, Nephrops norvegicus, (also called Dublin Bay prawn, langoustine or Scampi), is a slim orange-pink lobster up to 24 cm long [2] found in the north-eastern Atlantic Ocean and North Sea as far north as Iceland and northern Norway, and south to Portugal; it is not common in the Mediterranean except in the Adriatic,[3] notably the north Adriatic [4].

The tail is muscular, and is frequently eaten, often under the name "scampi". Norway lobster is eaten on special occasions in Spain and Portugal, where it is cheaper than the European lobster [5].

Norway lobsters, steamed in white wine
Norway lobsters, steamed in white wine

Norway lobsters are solitary predators, feeding on other animals such as worms and fish [6].

The Norway lobster is an important species for fisheries, being caught mostly by trawling. Around 60,000 tonnes are caught annually, half of it in the United Kingdom's waters [7]. Discards from Nephrops norvegicus fishery may account for up to 37% of the energy requirements of certain marine scavengers, such as the hagfish Myxine glutinosa [8]. Boats involved in Nephrops fishery also catch a number of fish species such as plaice and sole, and it is thought that without that revenue, Nephrops fishery would be economically unviable [9].

In December 1995, the commensal Symbion pandora was discovered attached to the mouthparts of a Norway lobster, and was found to be the first member of a new phylum, the Cycliophora [10].

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