Bivalve

Bivalvia
Temporal range: Cambrian – Recent
Mussels in the intertidal zone in Cornwall, England
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
Bivalvia

Linnaeus, 1758
A large number of venerid bivalves with their siphons visible
Shell of the giant clam (Tridacna gigas)
Empty shell of the giant clam
(Tridacna gigas)
The world's largest clam (187 cms), a Sphenoceramus steenstrupi fossil from Greenland in the Geological Museum in Copenhagen

The bivalves are a large class of molluscs, also known as pelecypods.

They have a hard calcareous shell made of two parts or 'valves'. The soft parts are inside the shell. The shell is usually bilaterally symmetrical.

There are over 30,000 species of bivalves, including the fossil species. There are about 9,200 living species in 1,260 genera and 106 families. All of them live in the water, most of them in the sea or in brackish water. Some live in fresh water. All are filter feeders: they lost their radula in the course of evolution. A few are carnivorous, eating much larger prey than the tiny microalgae eaten by other bivalves.

The best known examples of bivalves are clams, mussels, scallops and oysters.[1]

  1. Ponder W.F. & Lindberg David R. 2008. Phylogeny and evolution of the Mollusca. University of California Press. ISBN 0520-25092-3

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