CONCH-L Archives

Conchologists List

CONCH-L@LISTSERV.UGA.EDU

Options: Use Forum View

Use Monospaced Font
Show Text Part by Default
Show All Mail Headers

Message: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]
Topic: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]
Author: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]

Print Reply
Subject:
From:
Leslie Allen Crnkovic <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Conchologists of America List <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Sun, 28 Jul 2002 10:33:14 US/CENTRAL
Content-Type:
text/plain
Parts/Attachments:
text/plain (72 lines)
Hi Linda
I suppose you are referring to the ones I gave you...

Mercenaria is extremely variable in pattern & sculpture when young.
For example they may be sun rayed or have a nice zigzag pattern.
They may be blushed with a bit of yellow or lavender or brown.
Also inside they may or may not be blushed with hues of lavender, purple or
burgundy.  They can be heavily ridged in sculpture or completely soothe.
But they do not have the cross cancelation of Puberella (Chione) intapurpurea.

V. rigida is not normally found in Texas.

How ever Puberella (Chione) intapurpurea is.
I have provided plenty of them for you also.  Most of the same variation occurs
in them as well (with the exception of the zigzag patterns) However, they look
very distinctly different from the Mercenaria.  They have a squared shoulder
and comparability come to a stronger point and are less inflated.

In the Market Mercenaria classically get nick named
*  Cherry Stones
   I think these are the smallest you will find at the market about 2”
*  Little Neck’s
   I believe these are the medium sized ones
*  Quahogs / Chowder Clams
   as full adults

Leslie


-----Original Message-----
Linda,

First, it would be nice to know where you collected them.  However, if all
were found in the same locale and the adult has ridges over the entire
shell, you probably are collecting M. campechiensis (Gmelin, 1791).  M.
mercenaria has a smooth center in the large shells.  M. m also frequently
has purple on the interior, but very rarely so for M. c.  There was a named
form (notata Say) that has a brown zigzag pattern on the exterior, which can
be sparse or cover almost all the shell.  In my experience the pattern
persists in the adult shell.  I've found that for both the ridges are more
pronounced in the juveniles.

V. rigida would be a very rare find in Florida (Abbott restricts it to the
Keys).  If all those you found were from the SE coast and have color pattern
on the exterior, consider Puberella (Chione) intapurpurea (Conrad, 1849).

Marlo

-----Original Message-----
From: Conchologists of America List
Behalf Of Linda Bush

Hi, Gang!

Can someone please describe a juvenile Mercenaria mercenaria for me?   I
have been having trouble with small shells (say, perhaps the lagest of which
would be an inch and
three quarters in length), which are very similar to the mercenaria shell,
but the ridges are much more pronounced, and many of them have a colored
pattern.   Could this be the shell that loses the color and ridges as it
gets bigger (although I have one which is much bigger than the
aforementioned "babies," which retains both the pattern and ridges.

Otherwise, the shells are almost identical, i.e., the hinge, the palial
simus, the escutcheon, and the lunule.

I had previously identified some of these as Ventricolia rigidia
(I think), but am really wondering if I am not look at young Mercearias.

Confused by the Venerid clams,
Linda

ATOM RSS1 RSS2