Smooth Duck Clam

Smooth Duck Clam
Anatina anatina (Spengler, 1802)
Family Mactridae

The Smooth Duck Clam is fairly rare and since it is paper thin very hard to find whole. I have several complete versions in my collection.


A Smooth Duck Clam (S. Hutchinson Island 2020)

The Smooth Duck Clam, Anatina anatina (Spengler, 1802), is a bivalve rarely found in Southwest Florida. It is a close relative of the more common Channeled Duck Clam, Raeta plicatella (Lamarck, 1818), with which it could be confused. Both have very thin, fragile shells, but the latter species, however, shows a sculpture of broader concentric ribs and more rounded outline. The Smooth Duck Clam, as other species of the family Mactridae, has its two long siphons (one sucks water in for filter-feeding, the other expels the used water) fused to form a single, elephant trunk-like structure. This is shown in the Amy Tripp’s illustration of the live clam (the photo was taken in Collier County). The photo also shows the clam’s digging foot on the right.


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