Other common names for Donax variabilis include bean clam, butterfly clam, donax clam, and southern coquina.
Coquinas are consumed by various fish (such as Trachinotus carolinus and Menticirrhus spp.), shore birds, and humans (Homo sapiens).
Known Predators:
Coquinas have small, long, triangular-shaped shells, ranging from 15 to 25 cm in length. These shells contain very colorful bands, with a range of colors anywhere from red to violet.
Range length: 15 to 25 mm.
Other Physical Features: ectothermic ; bilateral symmetry
Sexual Dimorphism: sexes alike
Coquinas typically live between 1 to 2 years in the wild but can only live up to 3 days in the absence of moving water. Lack of water deprives the coquina of nutrients obtained through filter feeding.
Typical lifespan
Status: wild: 2 (high) years.
Coquina clams are commonly found at sandy beach fronts in the intertidal zone, where the tides ebb and flow. Some can also be found in knee-deep waters.
Habitat Regions: saltwater or marine
Aquatic Biomes: coastal
Other Habitat Features: intertidal or littoral
The coquina clam, Donax variabilis, ranges from the eastern coast of the United States, from New York to the Caribbean, and across the Gulf of Mexico and into Texas.
Biogeographic Regions: nearctic (Native ); atlantic ocean (Native )
Coquinas are filter feeders, feeding primarily on phytoplankton, algae, detritus, bacteria, and other small particles suspended in the surf as the waves ebb and flow. Feeding is performed through the use of short siphons.
Plant Foods: algae; phytoplankton
Other Foods: detritus ; microbes
Foraging Behavior: filter-feeding
Primary Diet: planktivore ; detritivore
Coquinas serve as food sources for shorebirds, fish, and humans. In addition, the abundance of coquinas on beaches is an indicator of the beach habitat’s ability to sustain life. A beach with a large number of coquinas indicates a healthy beach habitat due to the presence of naturally-formed sand and the absence of external factors such as human construction.
Coquinas are eaten and used as decoration because of their colorful markings. The shells are also be used in ornamental landscaping.
Positive Impacts: food ; body parts are source of valuable material
Through their filter-feeding, coquinas can concentrate toxins and harmful organisms (bacteria, viruses, etc) that may cause harm to humans when eaten.
Negative Impacts: injures humans (causes disease in humans , carries human disease, poisonous )
Coquina clams undergo indirect development, first from a trochophore larva to a veliger larva. The veliger larva uses its ciliated velum for swimming and feeding on plankton. Eventually, the veliger will settle to the seafloor, where it undergoes metamorphosis to the adult stage.
Development - Life Cycle: metamorphosis
Coquinas are not listed in the IUCN, as they are very common along beaches in the eastern United States. However, coquinas face certain challenges, such as rising sea levels, global warming, and beach erosion. Laws and regulations that curtail erosion and maintain the natural flow of sand on beaches benefit populations of this clam.
US Federal List: no special status
CITES: no special status
State of Michigan List: no special status
There is no known social communication between coquinas. However, they have a tendency to live within close proximity of each other, most likely due to favorable environmental factors for the clams.
Perception Channels: tactile ; chemical
Coquinas typically live in close proximity of each other, sometimes in colonies. They release their gametes when gravid and their close proximity with each other heightens the chances of fertilization.
Coquina clams are dioecious (male and female) broadcast spawners. Eggs and sperm are released synchronously into the water for external fertilization.
Breeding interval: Gametes are released when gravid
Key Reproductive Features: gonochoric/gonochoristic/dioecious (sexes separate); sexual ; fertilization (External ); broadcast (group) spawning; oviparous
There is no form of parental care. Fertilization occurs externally and larvae are left to feed and swim independently.
Parental Investment: no parental involvement
Donax variabilis, known by the common name coquina, is a species of small edible saltwater clam, a marine bivalve mollusc in the family Donacidae, the bean clams. It is a warm water species which occurs in shallow water on sandy beaches on the east coast of the United States.
This species occurs on the east coast of the United States, from Cape May, New Jersey to Florida including East Florida, West Florida and the Florida Keys.[1]
The maximum reported size is 19 mm (0.75 in).[1] The exterior of the small shell of this species can have any one of a wide range of possible colors, from almost white, through yellow, pink, orange, red, purple, to brownish and blueish, with or without the presence of darker rays.[2][3]
This species lives from the intertidal zone of sandy beaches to a depth of 11 m (36 ft).[4] As most mollusks, the coquina is host to a variety of parasites. On the Atlantic Coast of the United States, studies have shown that coquinas harbour the larval stages (cercariae, sporocysts) of at least three species of digeneans (none of these represents a danger for humans).[5]
The coquina is edible and is used to make broth. Some people collect the colorful shells to use for crafts.
Donax variabilis, known by the common name coquina, is a species of small edible saltwater clam, a marine bivalve mollusc in the family Donacidae, the bean clams. It is a warm water species which occurs in shallow water on sandy beaches on the east coast of the United States.
La almeja frijol (Donax variabilis) pertenece a la clase Bivalvia de moluscos. Viven exclusivamente en medio acuático, con una forma corporal de simetría bilateral, comprimida lateralmente y una concha de dos valvas (bivalva) que, en general, es bastante grande para admitir al animal completo.
Es un molusco que pertenece a la clase Bivalvia; orden Veneroida (Cardiida); familia Donacidae. Se caracteriza por tener una concha pequeña de unos 20 mm; de color variable, puede ser blanco, amarillo, rosa, púrpura o azul, con rayos de colores más obscuros, muy brillante, especialmente en el interior. Margen ventral de las valvas recto y casi paralelo al margen dorsal; extremo anterior adelgazado y comúnmente liso, pero al microscopio muestran grabaduras y líneas radiales en la parte media de las valvas; hacia el extremo posterior aparecen pequeños cordones radiales que se van incrementando. Margen interno de las valvas con pequeñas denticulaciones.[1]
El sistema circulatorio está formado por un corazón con dos aurículas. El sistema nervioso carece de particularidad alguna (ganglionar). La respiración es branquial. La cabeza es reducida hasta la parte branquial, faltando la región faríngea y la rádula. En general se alimentan filtrando agua. Los bivalvos son animales predominantemente de sexos separados, rara vez hermafroditas. La fecundación tiene lugar de manera libre en el agua o bien en la cavidad del manto.[1]
Se encuentra desde las costas de Florida, Texas, Tamaulipas, Veracruz, hasta Yucatán y Quintana Roo.[2]
Son fuente de alimento para aves de costa, peces y humanos. Además la abundancia de estos organismos es un indicador de la capacidad de la costa de sostener vida. Una playa con gran cantidad de estos bivalvos indica una playa saludable debido a la presencia de arena natural y la ausencia del factor humano.[3]
La almeja frijol (Donax variabilis) pertenece a la clase Bivalvia de moluscos. Viven exclusivamente en medio acuático, con una forma corporal de simetría bilateral, comprimida lateralmente y una concha de dos valvas (bivalva) que, en general, es bastante grande para admitir al animal completo.
Donax variabilis is een tweekleppigensoort uit de familie van de Donacidae.[1] De wetenschappelijke naam van de soort is voor het eerst geldig gepubliceerd in 1822 door Say.
Bronnen, noten en/of referenties