Hy Bob,
The large clam looks like Anadonta (or Anadontites but im not
sure they live there). The others seem Corbicula to me.
Regards,
Fabio.
--- Bob Dayle <[log in to unmask]> escreveu:
> Thanks, again, for the help.
>
> Below is my latest (and, probably, last) venture into the
> 'World of Clams.' I
> went back to the stream this evening to pick up a live
> specimen for a snapshot,
> to cinch the identification. It took about twenty minutes to
> get one, but I
> found other mollusc-related things and a few neat stones, as
> well.
>
> The largest shell is empty, is still joined at the hinge and
> is 3.75 inches
> across. (http://cowrys.org/~makuabob/jpgs/big_clam.jpg)
>
> The live clam is about 0.6 inch across. I somehow managed to
> capture several
> aspects of the soft parts.
> (http://cowrys.org/~makuabob/jpgs/clam.jpg)
>
> The single valves and the snail shell can be sized by the
> valve which has its
> inside visible; it too is 0.6 inch across.
> (http://cowrys.org/~makuabob/jpgs/stuffs.jpg)
>
> I doubt that there are any surprises coming out of this creek,
> except, perhaps,
> that Belted Kingfisher I saw last year!
>
> Aloha,
>
> Bob Dayle
>
> ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
> > Sounds too big for a sphaeriid (fingernail clam). If the
> "growth
> > rings" were regular concentric sculpture, then you had
> Corbicula.
> > Despite most of the literature, the main species of
> Corbicula invading
> > the U.S. is probably C. leana. A second species is known
> only from
> > the southwest (also invading Europe and South America),
> which may be
> > true fluminea (of which manilensis is a synonym).
> >
> > Unionids may show bands of color or weak irregular growth
> lines, but
> > no regular concentric sculpture in our species.
> >
> > As sculpture rather than growth rings, they form fairly
> quickly and
> > without direct connection to environmental factors. Tiny
> juveniles
> > already have several concentric ribs.
> >
> > Corbicula range from oval (not very elongate) to nearly
> triangular in
> > some large old individuals in lakes. Most unionids are more
> > elongate.
> >
> > --
> > Dr. David Campbell
> > 425 Scientific Collections Building
> > Department of Biological Sciences
> > Biodiversity and Systematics
> > University of Alabama, Box 870345
> > Tuscaloosa AL 35487-0345 USA
> >
> >
>
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