Into it. I would donate at least $5 a single time to this project.
then we will simply have to enhance it with titanium rods and robotics
:cyber-lenin:
Marine animals are able to get much larger than land animals because the buoyancy means they don't have to spend like 80% of their body weight on structural support.
I have no idea how lobster metabolism or anything else scales up though.
Need to advance science to help cultivate immortal lobsters.
Surgical internal lobster reinforcement. Since this is an infant science, we'll need an entire Leviathan God husbandry program to learn about what's the best way to give a lobster an endoskeleton.
Yes, but it doesn't apply to animals that live in the water (or at least not nearly as harshly, I'm not sure which). Their buoyancy keeps them from being crushed by their own weight.
mm, that's how deep sea gigantism works, right? neat, but also horrifying to visualise lol
I think that's a separate phenomenon, large animals also have a more efficient metabolism than small animals so it would help them go longer without food in a shitty sparse ocean floor.
I don't know anything about Anatomy or Biology but I think so, if its strength comes from the shell then as it gets larger the size of the shell doesn't match its weight proportionally and it will eventually collapse.
Yeah I need meaning and purpose in my life. Lobster can fix that
Do to their lack of myelinated nerve fibers by the time the creature could become large enough to seize it's real potential it could take minutes for impulses to fire down it's majestic chompers.
I'd feel better about the lobster's odds if some biomed university picked this up instead
I would like to participate in this. I wonder how much a massive lobster might be able to learn over centuries
You could do this with a female tarantula too technically
I guess he's growing a masculine light lobster of order to fight the effeminate darkness dragon of chaos?
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Lobster Would this be a good place to start?