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Most shelled gastropods have a one piece shell (with exceptional bivalved gastropods), typically coiled or spiraled, at least in the larval stage. This coiled shell usually opens on the right-hand side (as viewed with the shell apex pointing upward). Numerous species have an operculum, which in many species acts as a trapdoor to close the shell ...
Umbilicated – Having an opening in the base of the shell. [1] Undulated – Having undulations or waves. [1] Univalve – Having the shell composed of a single piece, as a snail. [1] Varicose – Swollen or enlarged. [1] Vascular – Containing or made up of blood vessels. [1] Vermiform – Formed like a worm. [1] Ventral – The lower border ...
Edible molluscs are used to prepare many different dishes, such as Oysters Rockefeller (pictured). This is a partial list of edible molluscs.Molluscs are a large phylum of invertebrate animals, many of which have shells.
Loose shell plates or valves of Chiton tuberculatus from the beach drift. A valve is each articulating part of the shell of a mollusc or another multi-shelled animal such as brachiopods and some crustaceans. Each part is known as a valve or in the case of chitons, a "plate".
Five views of a shell of Pomacea paludosa. This species is the largest freshwater gastropod native to North America. [3] The shell is globose in shape. The whorls are wide, the spire is depressed, and the aperture is narrowly oval. [3] The shells are brown in color, and have a pattern of stripes. The shell is 60 millimetres (2.4 in) in both ...
The existence of this pocket shows even in an empty shell, as a visible indentation in the pallial line, a line which runs along parallel to the ventral margin of the shell. [10] The bivalve's two siphons are situated at the posterior edge of the mantle cavity. [11] There is an inhalant or incurrent siphon, and an exhalant or excurrent siphon. [12]
The umbo (plural umbones or umbos) is the vaguely defined, often most prominent, highest part of each valve of the shell of a bivalve or univalve mollusc. It usually contains the valve's beak, the oldest point of the valve, and its degree of prominence and position relative to the hinge line are sometimes helpful in distinguishing bivalve taxa. [1]
The maximum shell length of this species is up to 120 mm (4 + 3 ⁄ 4 in), [3] [4] but it more commonly grows up to about 90 mm (3 + 1 ⁄ 2 in). [4] The shell of Haliotis asinina has a distinctly elongated contour, in clear resemblance to a donkey ear, hence the common name.