Product Description
Squeaky Lobster PVC 9.5" ~ Squeak Toy ~ F3410-B60 This is a very nice Item, one of our Best sellers.
Our Plastic Lobster This toy lobster is made of soft, PVC. It's so realistic, it's almost a replica of a real lobster. It is slightly squeezable like a rubber animal, and it floats. When you fill it with water, it squirts from the mouth. When it's filled with air, it squeaks when you squeeze it! This plastic lobster makes for a great display item for restaurants or aquariums. The 9.5-inch length is measured from the curved feelers to the end of its tail. If you are having a lobster bake or party, these make great decorations, place card holders, or gifts for the host if you are the one attending the party! Check out our other lobster, shrimp, and crayfish toys and gifts as well as all of our aquatic and sea life toys and replicas. Clawed Lobster Facts Our lobster replica is a clawed lobster, a large marine crustacean related to freshwater crayfish. Clawed lobster fossils date back to at least the Cretaceous period, over 65 million years ago. Although their appearance is similar to scorpions, lobsters are not arachnids, they are arthropods, with ten legs total (the first three sets have claws, and the first of these are much bigger than the others). Lobsters are among the very few animals that show no detrimental effects of aging, continuing to grow and increase in fertility until an outside force (disease, predication, or injury) causes death. Generally, lobsters are less than 20 inches long. The largest lobster was caught in Canada and weighed over 44 pounds. Lobsters live in all oceans and may live as deep as 2,000 fathoms, or 3,700 meters. They are omnivores, preferring live fish, crustaceans and some plant life. In the wild lobsters have been known to scavenge, and have resorted to cannibalism in captivity where all other food sources are absent. Lobster is an extremely popular and sought-after food. All commercial lobster are caught wild. While attempts to domesticate and farm lobsters continue, none have been commercially successful.