Humans, that's basically it. Anything else that would swallow a lobster would not come that close to shore.
comin from a lobster fisherman
NO
Yeah, me
a lobster has many predators from sharks to octopi and sometimes Evan other lobsters and human. Chris.m. age 12
Lobsters will tuck their tails under their abdomens and quickly propel themselves backward to escape predators. Some lobsters have a spine on their tail for protecting them from predators.
Lobsters typically don't eat their own young, but they will eat baby lobsters from other parents. Lobsters often eat their old shell.
Lobsters have several natural predators in the ocean. Common predators include large fish such as cod and haddock, as well as other marine animals like seals and sea turtles. Additionally, crabs can pose a threat to juvenile lobsters. In their natural habitat, lobsters rely on their hard shells and burrowing behavior for protection from these predators.
They become more vonerable to predators but it allows them to grow.
Lobsters are nocturnal predators, meaning they catch live prey at night. They use their large claws to break open the shells of clams, crabs, mussels, sea urchins and even other lobsters.
Flounders eat minnows.
Feed on almost anything that they come across without fear of most predators.
Lobsters use their large claws (chelipeds) as their main defense mechanism. These claws are powerful and can inflict injury on potential predators or threats. Lobsters also have a hard exoskeleton that provides protection from predators.
When lobsters are young, their predators are different kinds of fish, usually cod, tench, flounder, sculpin, wolffish, ocean pout, monkfish, and dogfish. Adult lobsters have no real predators except man. When they are moulting (throwing off their too-small shells) they are vulnerable to other sea creatures, but they usually change in a sheltered place.