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You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > Zoology: Invertebrates > bivalve
By Alphabet : Encyclopedia A-Z > B

bivalve, Zoology: Invertebrates

Related Category: Zoology: Invertebrates

Bivalves differ in their habits: some, such as the oysters and marine mussels, have a reduced foot and are permanently attached to a substratum; some, such as the clams and freshwater mussels, burrow slowly through the sand or mud using the foot; some, such as the cockle shells, live on or near the surface of the ocean floor; still others, such as the shipworm, burrow through rocks or wood seeking protected dwellings and do damage to rock pilings and other marine installations. The scallops swim with great speed by suddenly clapping the shell valves together and ejecting water from the mantle cavity. Bivalves that are exposed at low tide, such as the marine mussels, keep their gills wet with water retained in the mantle cavity.

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The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia Copyright © 2009, Columbia University Press.
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Topics that might be of interest to you:

clam
cockle
geoduck
giant clam
Mollusca
mussel
oyster
scallop
shipworm

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Plants and Animals > Animals


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