Angelwings: Family Pholadidae

Angel Wings: Family Pholadidae

Angelwings or piddocks are a family of bivalves similar to a clam.

There are several types of Angelwings.

 

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Pholadidae
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Temporal range: Jurassic–Recent
One valve of a shell of Cyrtopleura costata
Scientific classification e
Kingdom:     Animalia
Phylum:     Mollusca
Class:     Bivalvia
Subclass:     Heterodonta
Order:     Myida
Superfamily:     Pholadoidea
Family:     Pholadidae
Lamarck, 1809

Genera
Pholadidae, known as piddocks or angelwings, are a family of bivalve molluscs similar to a clam.

Background
Piddocks are unique in that each side of their shells is divided into 2 or 3 separate sections. Furthermore, one of the piddock's shells has a set of ridges or "teeth", which they use to grind away at clay or soft rock and create tubular burrows. The shape of these burrows are due to the rotating motion of the piddock as it grinds the rock to make its home. The piddock stays in the burrow it digs for the entirety of its eight-year lifespan, with only its siphon exposed to take in water that it filters for food. When the piddock dies and leaves an empty tubular burrow, other marine life such as sea anemone, crabs and other molluscs may use the burrow.

Some species of Pholadidae may reach up to 18 cm (7″). Their coloration is typically white, though through consumption of red tide algae some may develop a pink coloration.

    The angelwing species Cyrtopleura costata has approximately 26 radiating ribs. Growth lines run horizontally over the surface of the shell. Angelwings have a spoon-shaped brace under the beak of the shell, called the apophysis, where the mollusc's foot muscles are attached. Cyrtopleura costata possesses long siphons which protrude from its burrow and circulate water as the source for its food supply. It cannot retract its siphons into the protection of its shell, so the two valves can never shut completely. The muscles fusing the shell's valves together are weak, making it rare to find angelwings with both halves still intact. Some shell hunters dig for the living clam, and if dug up, the fragile shell must be placed immediately into a container of water or it will close and shatter. The angelwing's shell is popular with collectors, as well as a delicious food staple. The angelwing lives offshore and in estuaries, sometimes as much as a metre (three feet) deep in the mud or clay.
    The Atlantic mud-piddock, Barnea truncata, often referred to as the fallen angelwing, is classed among the angelwing varieties, growing up to 5.7 cm (2¼″) and is similar to other angelwings but with weaker sculpture. One end is squared off and the other end pointed. Loose accessory plates are located above the hinge on live specimens. It possesses a white exterior and interior. It burrows into mud, clay or softwood. Occasionally it is washed onto sounds and ocean beaches, and has a habitat range from Nova Scotia[1] to Brazil. This fragile shell is rarely dug from mud without breaking. It burrows deeply and has long, united siphons.
    The false angelwing Petricola pholadiformis, is also classed among varieties of angelwing, growing up to 7 cm (2¾″). It has a thin, elongate shell resembling a small angelwing but lacks the rolled-out hinge area. Its beak is at one end of the shell with strong radial ribbing on the beak end. Teeth are located on hinge and a deep pallial sinus and partially united siphons. It has a white exterior and interior. It typically burrows into hard surfaces such as clay or peat in intertidal zones. It is commonly found on sounds and ocean beaches with a range from Canada to Uruguay.
    The common piddock (Pholas dactylus) is known for its bioluminescence[2][3] and was investigated by Raphaël Dubois in his 1887 discovery of luciferin.

Genera and selected species
Two views of a whole shell of Barnea candida

    Genus Barnea Risso, 1826
        Barnea candida Linnaeus, 1758
        Barnea fragilis
        Barnea manilensis (Philippi, 1847)
        Barnea parva Pennant, 1777
        Barnea similis (Gray, 1835)
        Barnea subtruncata (G. B. Sowerby I, 1834)
        Barnea truncata (Say, 1822)
    Genus Chaceia Turner, 1855
        Chaceia ovoidea (Gould, 1851)
    Genus Cyrtopleura Tryon, 1862
        Cyrtopleura costata (Linnaeus, 1758)
    Genus Diplothyra Tryon, 1862
        Diplothyra smithii Tryon, 1862
    Genus Jouannetia Desmoulins, 1828
        Jouannetia quillingi Turner, 1955
    Genus Martesia G. B. Sowerby I, 1824
        Martesia cuneiformis (Say, 1822)
        Martesia fragilis A. E. Verrill and Bush, 1890
        Martesia striata (Linnaeus, 1758)
    Genus Netastoma Carpenter, 1864
        Netastoma japonicum (Yokoyama, 1920)
        Netastoma rostratum (Valenciennes, 1846)
    Genus Nettastomella Carpenter, 1865
        Nettastomella darwini (Sowerby, 1849)
    Genus Parapholas Conrad, 1848
        Parapholas californica (Conrad, 1837)
    Genus Penitella Valenciennes, 1846
        Penitella conradi Valenciennes, 1846
        Penitella fitchi Turner, 1955
        Penitella gabbii (Tryon, 1863)
        Penitella hopkinsi Kennedy and Armentrout, 1989
        Penitella kamakurensis (Yokoyama, 1922)
        Penitella penita (Conrad, 1837)
        Penitella richardsoni Kennedy, 1989
        Penitella turnerae Evans and Fisher, 1966
    Genus Pholadidea Turton, 1819
        Pholadidea acherontea Beu and Climo, 1974
        Pholadidea loscombiana Turton, 1819
        Pholadidea spathulata (Sowerby, 1850)
        Pholadidea tridens (Gray, 1843)
    Genus Pholas Linnaeus, 1758
        Pholas campechiensis Gmelin, 1791
        Pholas dactylus Linnaeus, 1758 – common piddock
    Genus Xylophaga Turton, 1822

    Xylophaga dorsalis
        Xylophaga abyssorum Dall, 1886
        Xylophaga atlantica Richards, 1942
        Xylophaga dorsalis (Turton, 1819)
        Xylophaga praestans E. A. Smith, 1903
        Xylophaga washingtona Bartsch, 1921
    Genus Xyloredo Turner, 1972
        Xyloredo naceli Turner, 1972
        Xyloredo nooi Turner, 1972
    Genus Zirfaea Gray, 1842
        Zirfaea crispata (Linnaeus, 1758)
        Zirfaea pilsbryi Lowe, 1931

Gallery

    Valves of the Atlantic mud-piddock or fallen angelwing, Barnea truncata

    Siphons of the rough piddock, Zirfaea pilsbryi in Puget Sound

    burrows, 2.5 cm (1″) or less, in calcic rock, coast Boulogne - Calais (France)

    Angelwing and associated burrows

    Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pholadidae.
See also
    Pholad borings

References
http://www.registrelep.gc.ca/virtual_sara/files/cosewic/sr_Atlantic%20Mud-piddock_0810_e.pdf
Basic information for Pholas dactylus (Common piddock)

    Vincent Pieribone and David F. Gruber. Aglow in the Dark: The Revolutionary Science of Biofluorescence. Harvard University Press, 2005.

External links
    Angelwing
    Cyrtopleura costata Angelwing clams
    NC Sea Grant Seashells of NC Field Guide
    Angelwing, Cyrtopleura costata
    Cyrtopleura costata taxonomy
    ITIS
    [1]


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