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Habitat

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Buried in mud flats; also found in gravel, sand, or muddy clay
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Distribution

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Geographical Range: Kodiak Island, Alaska to Cabo San Lucas, Baja California, Mexico
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Habitat

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Depth Range: Low intertidal to 50 m
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Comprehensive Description

provided by Invertebrates of the Salish Sea
Like all members of family Tellinidae, this clam has a rounded shell with neither valve very flat nor very inflated, and the anterior and posterior ends are shaped differently. There are two adductor muscle scars of similar size on each valve. The umbones are near the middle of the dorsal side. It has no radial ribs. The hinge has a true hinge plate with two cardinal teeth on both valves. The hinge ligament is mostly external. The valves have a pallial sinus and a continuous pallial line. The valves gape only slightly, if at all, at the posterior end. The siphons are long and separate. Macoma nasuta has a long hinge ligament, no lateral teeth on its hinge plate, is less than twice as long as high, and the posterior end of both valves is bent to the right. The pallial sinuses are large, extend to beneath the anterior adductor muscle scars, and are very close to the pallial line ventral to them. Length to 11 cm but usually not more than 6 cm. Shells are chalky white and usually unstained, with some grayish-brown periostracum.
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Look Alikes

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How to Distinguish from Similar Species: This is the only clam in this area that has the posterior ends of the valves bent strongly to the right. Tellina bodegensis, a much less common relative, may also be bent slightly to the right.
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Comprehensive Description

provided by Invertebrates of the Salish Sea
Biology/Natural History: This common clam lies on its left side instead of vertically, at a depth of 10-20 cm. It rocks back and forth while digging. The siphons extend out the right side and up to the surface, which are well accomodated by the twist to the right of the shell. The siphons are used to suck debris from the surface of the sediment like a vacuum cleaner. The clams digest mainly diatoms and some flagellates from the sediments. They ingest large quantities of sediment but reject 97% of it, producing copious pseudofeces. Hinton says the clam moves to another location when the sediment in an area has been thoroughly picked over. Predators include the moon snail Polinices lewisii. The clam was an important food of the coastal Indian tribes and to Chinese immigrants in San Francisco but is little used commercially today because of the debris that is usually in the gut. This species is very hardy and can be found in areas that have very poor circulation, and can live in very soft, silty mud. The pea crab Pinnixa littoralis or P. faba may live in the mantle cavity, as may the Nemertean worm Malacobdella grossa. The species spawns in early summer in Oregon.
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Macoma nasuta

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Macoma nasuta, commonly known as the bent-nosed clam, is a species of bivalve found along the Pacific Ocean coast of North America. It is about 6 cm (2.4 in) long.[1] It is often found buried in sands of 10–20 cm (3.9–7.9 in) in depth.[1] This rounded clam has no radial ribs. Archaeological data supports the use of this species by Native Americans such as the Chumash peoples of central California.[2]

Names

Macoma nasuta is commonly known as the bent-nosed clam or bent-nose Macoma.[3] It is commonly misidentified as either Macoma tersa or Macoma kelseyi.[3]

Description

The hinge plate is without lateral teeth and the length of shell much less than twice the height. Posterior portions of both valves distinctly bent to the right with the siphons distinctly separated (as they are in all Macoma) and have a distinct orange pigmentation. The periostracum is usually very prominent and the shell has a dirty brown wrinkled look to it, especially near the margin.[4]

Distinguishing characteristics

Valves bent rather sharply to the right at the posterior end, orange coloration of its siphons and periostracum is usually very prominent.[3]

Habitat

Common in intertidal and subtidal (50 m) zones; Prefers mud to muddy sand substrates situated in quiet waters and can burrow up to 40 cm beneath the surface sediment. M. nasuta and M. secta are geographically sympatric species and both are the characteristic species of Macoma on the west coast of North America.[5]

Range

Found in the neritic provinces of the eastern Pacific Ocean from Kodiak Island, Alaska, to Cabo San Lucas, Baja California.[6]

Feeding and digestion

Found to feed off the top millimeter of sediment by using a boring motion with the tip of its siphon into the sediment or by using a rotating motion similar to Scrobicularia plana.[7] New sediment is found by moving the siphon into virgin sediment but the clams have also been observed to consume their pseudofeces and feces. It is assumed that the siphon tip is unselective in the particles it intakes.[8]

Non-specific nematodes have been found in the stomach in all stages of digestion from live to empty cuticles. The small (about 500 μm) bivalve Transenella tantilla has also been found living in the stomach. The relationship with both nematodes and T. tantilla is uncertain.[8]

The exhalant siphon is kept below the sediment surface (about 1 cm). The gut clearance time for inert particles of M. nasuta ranges from 1 to 9 hours with smaller particles and diatoms believed to remain longer than other particles ingested due to their disproportionably high presence in the stomach during dissections.[8]

Bioaccumulation of toxins

Due to their feeding behavior of deposit feeding, M. nasuta have been found to have high levels of DDT and PCBs.[9]

Reproduction

M. nasuta is a dioecious (probably gonochoristic) species that spawns in early summer.[6][10]

Natural history

There is archaeological data to support the use of this species by Native Americans such as the Chumash peoples of central California.[2]

Predators

Shore birds, Lewis' Moon Snail: Polinices lewisii, Starfish: Pisaster spp., Crabs: Cancer productus, Metacarcinus gracilis, Metacarcinus magister.[11]

Known parasites

References

  1. ^ a b Desmond, Julie S.; West, Janelle M.; Williams, Gregory D. (2001). "Appendix 5: Ecological and life history characteristics of common southern California salt marsh invertebrate species". In Zedler, Joy B. (ed.). Handbook for restoring tidal wetlands. Boca Raton, Florida: CRC Press. p. 403. ISBN 9781420036619.
  2. ^ a b C. Michael Hogan, Los Osos Back Bay, The Megalithic Portal, ed. Andy Burnham (January, 2008)
  3. ^ a b c Dave Cowles (2005). "Macoma (Heteromacoma) nasuta (Conrad, 1837)". Walla Walla University. Archived from the original on 2010-06-02. Retrieved 2010-07-31.
  4. ^ KOZLOFF, E. 1996. Marine invertebrates of the Pacific Northwest, Univ. Wash. Press ISBN 0-295-97562-8
  5. ^ Sept, J. Duane (1999). The beachcomber's guide to seashore life in the Pacific Northwest. Madeira Park, B.C.: Harbour Pub. ISBN 9781550172041.
  6. ^ a b Rae, John Gibson, III (August 1978). "Reproduction in two sympatric species of Macoma (Bivalvia)". The Biological Bulletin. 155 (1): 207–219. doi:10.2307/1540876. JSTOR 1540876.
  7. ^ Hughes, Roger N. (11 May 2009). "A study of feeding in Scrobicularia plana". Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom. 49 (3): 805–823. doi:10.1017/S0025315400037309. S2CID 86570453.
  8. ^ a b c Hylleberg, J.; Gallucci, V. F. (1975). "Selectivity in feeding by the deposit-feeding bivalve Macoma nasuta". Marine Biology. 32 (2): 167–178. doi:10.1007/BF00388509. S2CID 84097681.
  9. ^ Boese, Bruce L.; Lee, Henry; Echols, Scott (July 1997). "Evaluation of a first-order model for the prediction of the bioaccumulation of PCBS and DDT from sediment into the marine deposit-feeding clam". Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry. 16 (7): 1545–1553. doi:10.1002/etc.5620160731. S2CID 84726449.
  10. ^ Bivalves of The Evergreen State College Campus
  11. ^ Kozloff, Eugene N. (1993). Seashore life of the northern Pacific coast : an illustrated guide to northern California, Oregon, Washington, and British Columbia. Seattle: University of Washington Press. ISBN 9780295960845.
  12. ^ Schell, Stewart C. (October 1986). "Graffilla pugetensis n. sp. (order Neorhabdocoela: Graffillidae), a parasite in the pericardial cavity of the bent-nose clam, Macoma nasuta (Conrad, 1837)". The Journal of Parasitology. 72 (5): 748–754. doi:10.2307/3281468. JSTOR 3281468.
  13. ^ DeMartini, John D.; Pratt, Ivan (February 1964). "The life cycle of Telolecithus pugetensis Lloyd and Guberlet, 1932 (Trematoda: Monorchidae)". The Journal of Parasitology. 50 (1): 101–105. doi:10.2307/3276040. JSTOR 3276040. PMID 14125150.
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Macoma nasuta: Brief Summary

provided by wikipedia EN

Macoma nasuta, commonly known as the bent-nosed clam, is a species of bivalve found along the Pacific Ocean coast of North America. It is about 6 cm (2.4 in) long. It is often found buried in sands of 10–20 cm (3.9–7.9 in) in depth. This rounded clam has no radial ribs. Archaeological data supports the use of this species by Native Americans such as the Chumash peoples of central California.

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