burrow into the sand with their foot.
Modifications of the mantle have
provided them with two pegs of muscle
for closing the shells, and with the
muscular tube — the siphon or “neck” —
that they extend to the sand surface and
use to draw in passing food particles. All
the bivalves — clams, mussels, oysters
— have comb-like gills for filtering food
particles from the water that the mantle
draws in and expels.
Mussels are also two-shelled filter
feeders, but they attach their foot
permanently to intertidal and subtidal
rocks. They have no need for a siphon,
and one of their tough shell-closing
muscles is much reduced.
Oysters cement themselves to inter- and
sub-tidal rocks. Their two heavy shells
are closed by a single large muscle at
their center, around which the mantle and
other organs are organized. The bulk of
barry
(Barry)
#1