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Razor shell is a bivalve mollusk of the family Pharidae, also known as razor clam or spoot. It has a long, rectangular shell with a straight edge and a curved ventral margin, and lives in sandy beaches of Canada and northern Europe.
The Atlantic jackknife clam, also known as the bamboo clam, is a large edible bivalve mollusc on the North American Atlantic coast. It has a sharp-rimmed shell, a strong foot and a keyhole-shaped opening in the sand, and is difficult to catch but a delicacy to eat.
Pacific razor clam, Siliqua patula, is a large marine bivalve mollusc in the family Pharidae. It is a popular food species along the Pacific West Coast of North America and has a distinctive elongated oval shell.
Aug. 21—Razor clamming is now open from the south jetty of the Siuslaw River to Cape Blanco, the Oregon Department of Agriculture and ODFW announced today. Recent shellfish samples indicate ...
Ensis ensis is a razor clam, a marine bivalve mollusc in the family Pharidae. It lives buried in the sand and is found off the coasts of northwest Europe, from the Baltic Sea to the Atlantic coast of Spain and Portugal.
Nov. 22—Post-Thanksgiving razor clams will be ready to dig beginning Nov. 24, Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) coastal shellfish managers confirmed Tuesday. Not all beaches are ...
The pod razor (Ensis siliqua) is a coastal bivalve of European waters. It is edible and has been fished commercially, especially in Portugal, Spain, Ireland and Scotland. [3] Ensis siliqua is also known as the razor fish, razor clam or giant razor. There is at least one subspecies: E. s. minor. [4]
Sep. 12—Shellfish managers with the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) last week announced 56 tentative dates for razor clam digs at coastal beaches from Sept. 22 through Dec. 28.