Yes, mammals typically have red blood due to the presence of hemoglobin, which binds oxygen. Insects have a different oxygen transport system using hemolymph, which can appear yellowish due to the presence of other pigments. Lobsters and some other arthropods have blue blood because they use hemocyanin, a copper-containing protein, to transport oxygen.
God
The blood of insects is typically colorless or pale yellow due to the lack of red blood cells found in vertebrates.
The insects blood is clear or pale green-yellow!!!!!!!!WHY DO U CARE WHICH COLOUR IT IS
There are many different kind of lobsters around the world. The color of lobsters is dependent on where they live and what they eat. Lobsters can be blue, red, yellow, yellow calico, two-toned, and black.
It may appear yellow, green, or blue because of other things in it. Insects breathe through their skin, so the blood doesn't carry oxygen. In humans and many other animals, it contains hemoglobin, which turns red when it picks up oxygen. Most insects don't have hemoglobin and don't have red blood.
The insects blood is clear or pale green-yellow!!!!!!!!WHY DO U CARE WHICH COLOUR IT IS
Lobsters in the wild are generally mottled yellow, green, brown, and almost never red. The reason they turn red during cooking is that other pigmentations are broken down by heat, but the red pigments are not.
Yes! They do have blood. If you pick them up some might put come orange-yellow stuff on you for self-defence and that is their blood!!!
Some crabs and lobsters.
Copper
The copper in their blood gives their blood a bluish tint. It is much like how iron in our blood causes our blood to be red. Haemoglobin is a red pigment in blood that makes the blood red when it comes out into oxygen (that why when we bleed, our blood is red.) some animals do not have haemoglobin in blood, for example LOBSTERS! So this is why their blood is blue.
It is clear fluid that is edible if cooked.