- Description
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- Piddocks have rather uniquely evolved shells. Rather than containing their body fully
inside a bivalve shell enclosure, they burrow a cavity into wood, rock, and depend on other
materials as well (including other shells) for their protection. To accomplish this, the main
shell halves each have formed into separable, movable, grinding plates, which are usually
too small to completely encircle the mollusc. These rounded plates have stubby external
spikes on the anterior sides, for grating much like a nutmeg grater. Each half-shell also has a unique spoon shaped
apophysis on the inside surface. This serves as a muscle attachment to allow dorsal/ventral
movement in addition to anteror/posterior movement (See bottom figure on this page).
Several additional points of attachment mark other muscle bundles that facilitate
rotational movement. Ciliary currents of water flush out the debris while the shell
assembly operates against a rock surface much as a pestil and mortar function to grind
hard materials.
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- The two principal shells leave large gaps over the bivalve's soft body parts. In the
adult, the gaps may later become covered by a number of flexible supplementary plates
(protoplax, metaplax, mesoplax, and siphonoplax). The siphonoplax, for example, consists
of two half round collars that fully encircle the large siphon of the clam, providing some
degree of flexible protection.
Classification
- Class: Bivalvia
- Subclass: Heterodonta
- Order: Myoida
- Superfamily: Pholadacea
- Family: Pholadidae
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- Major Genera
- Genus: Barnea
- Genus: Chaceia
- Genus: Cyrtopleura
- Genus: Martesia
- Genus: Pholas
- Genus: Zirfaea
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Cyrtopleura costata, Linnaeus, 1758
Angel Wing


Barnea subtruncata, Sowerby, 1834
Truncated Piddock
LINK --SEE A LIVE ANGEL WING CLAM:
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