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Arctic Hiatella

Hiatella arctica (Linnaeus 1767)

Comprehensive Description

provided by Arctic Ocean Biodiversity 2011
Outside - calcareous white. Inside - white; Periostracum (gray, light brown to dark brown), as a rule, absent except regions close to siphons and shell edge
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Arctic Ocean Diversity
author
Andrey Voronkov

Habitat

provided by Arctic Ocean Biodiversity 2011
Epibenthic mainly. Use byssal threads for attachment to the substratum; Very eurybiotic. Litoral-sublitoral mainly; On rock, stones and gravel substrates. Sometimes on silty or sandy substrates. Juveniles could be abundant on algae; Widespread subtropic (tropic?) - arctic species. May be bipolar.
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Arctic Ocean Diversity
author
Andrey Voronkov

Life Cycle

provided by Arctic Ocean Biodiversity 2011
Development with long stage of pelagic larvae
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Arctic Ocean Diversity
author
Andrey Voronkov

Trophic Strategy

provided by Arctic Ocean Biodiversity 2011
Filter feeders.
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Arctic Ocean Diversity
author
Andrey Voronkov

Description

provided by NMNH Antarctic Invertebrates

Saxicava arctica, Linné, 1767. Plate 55, figs. 6, a.

Shell small, polymorphous, inequilateral, usually oblong, very rugose, thin, sometimes fragile, young specimens very often with posterior spinous ridges, white or light brown. Beaks approximate, slightly raised, tumid, tricarinate, 1 anterior and 2 posterior, incurved and acute. Anterior end much shorter, usually truncated or convex and very rapidly descending; posterior end frequently very long, truncated or convex; the basal margin broadly convex or more or less deeply sinuated. Epidermis thin, dull, brown. Sculpture consisting of very irregular, concentric, sharply raised, often anastomosing riblets, crowded in front, distant and rather lamellar posteriorly; 2 sharp ridges are descending on each valve from the umbones towards the posterior end, and in young specimens are usually ornamented with small tubular spines. Colour light brown or nearly white. Interior white, slightly shining, smooth. Hinge very narrow; right valve with an oblique small tooth below and just in front of the umbo, and a socket behind it; left valve with a small, conical, upturned tooth a little behind the beak. Ligament external, short, rather prominent. Adductor-scars unequal, the posterior larger. Pallial sinus shallow.

Dimensions extremely variable, the greatest length of shells I have seen being 17 mm.

Hab. – Throughout New Zealand, Chatham, Auckland, and Kermadec Islands.

The species is apparently distributed all over the globe, and is found from low-water mark to about 500 fathoms.

Fossil in the Pliocene.”

(Suter, 1913)

Hiatella arctica

provided by wikipedia EN

Hiatella arctica, known as the wrinkled rock-borer, the arctic hiatella or the arctic saxicave, is a species of saltwater clam, a marine bivalve mollusc in the family Hiatellidae. The white shell of this mollusc is thick and more or less rectangular, but generally irregular in shape. It is up to 45 mm long.

Hiatella arctica is widespread and found in all the oceans, ranging from the Arctic and Antarctic to the subtropical and tropical zones. It occurs from the low water mark to depths of down to 800 m. It lives on hard substrates, often attached with byssus, for instance in mussel beds or nestling among kelp holdfasts, or hiding in rock crevices and also boring itself into soft rocks.

References

  1. ^ Hatatella arctica (Linnaeus, 1767) WoRMS - World Register of Marine Species (2015)
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Hiatella arctica: Brief Summary

provided by wikipedia EN

Hiatella arctica, known as the wrinkled rock-borer, the arctic hiatella or the arctic saxicave, is a species of saltwater clam, a marine bivalve mollusc in the family Hiatellidae. The white shell of this mollusc is thick and more or less rectangular, but generally irregular in shape. It is up to 45 mm long.

Hiatella arctica is widespread and found in all the oceans, ranging from the Arctic and Antarctic to the subtropical and tropical zones. It occurs from the low water mark to depths of down to 800 m. It lives on hard substrates, often attached with byssus, for instance in mussel beds or nestling among kelp holdfasts, or hiding in rock crevices and also boring itself into soft rocks.

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Distribution

provided by World Register of Marine Species
Arctic Seas to deep waters in West Indies; Arctic seas to deep water off Panama

Reference

North-West Atlantic Ocean species (NWARMS)

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WoRMS Editorial Board
contributor
Kennedy, Mary [email]

Habitat

provided by World Register of Marine Species
intertidal, bathyal, infralittoral and circalittoral of the Gulf and estuary

Reference

North-West Atlantic Ocean species (NWARMS)

license
cc-by-4.0
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WoRMS Editorial Board
contributor
Kennedy, Mary [email]