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Distribution ( İngilizce )

Invertebrates of the Salish Sea tarafından sağlandı
Geographical Range: Kodiak Island, Alaska to central California. Uncommon in California.
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Invertebrates of the Salish Sea

Habitat ( İngilizce )

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Depth Range: Middle and low Intertidal and subtidal to 30 m
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Comprehensive Description ( İngilizce )

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As with other members of family Mactridae, this species has 2 valves similar to one another and 2 adductor muscle scars that are similar in size, has a true hinge plate with teeth and a socketlike chondrophore in both valves, a pallial sinus and continuous pallial line, and no radial ribs. Tresus capax has a shell often over 10 cm long and with a wide gape at the posterior end. The shell is about 1.5 times as long as high, and the umbones are near the end of the anterior third of the shell. Periostracum, where it is still attached, a dark brown or black. Shell chalky white or yellow. This is the largest intertidal clam in the northern part of its range, though in Puget Sound the geoduck clam is larger.
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Invertebrates of the Salish Sea

Look Alikes ( İngilizce )

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How to Distinguish from Similar Species: Tresus nuttallii has a shell more than 1.5x as long as high and the umbones are near the end of the anterior quarter
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Invertebrates of the Salish Sea

Comprehensive Description ( İngilizce )

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Biology/Natural History: These clams have extremely long siphons which extend up from their deep location to the surface of the mud. The siphons are fised together but the internal channels are separate. Predators include the moon snail Polinices lewisii, the crab Cancer magister, and the seastars Pycnopodia helianthoides and Pisaster brevispinus. Fusitron oregonensis will attack it if it gets the chance. Commensals include the crabs Pinnixa faba and Pinnixa littoralis, in the mantle cavity. The small male crabs move around but the larger females remain sheltered by a fringe of tissue, the visceral skirt, attached to the clam's visceral mass. They scrape plankton from this fringe. During the winter this clam depletes its glycogen stores from the gonads. Fat stores are only used if the glycogen has been exhausted. This clam is often eaten by man, especially by native Americans. When dug up, this clam may not be capable of reburying itself again. In Washington, reaches maturity in 3-4 years. Spawn in winter.
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Invertebrates of the Salish Sea

Habitat ( İngilizce )

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Burrowing in mud and clay, to depths of up to 1 m; in quiet bays
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Invertebrates of the Salish Sea

Tresus capax ( İngilizce )

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Tresus capax is a species of saltwater clam, marine bivalve mollusk, common name the fat gaper, in the family Mactridae.[1] It also shares the common name horse clam with Tresus nuttallii a species which is similar in morphology and lifestyle. Both species are somewhat similar to the geoduck (Panopea generosa, which is in the family Hiatellidae), though smaller, with shells up to eight inches long (20 cm), weight to 3–4 lb (1.4–1.8 kg).

The two species commonly known as horse clams inhabit the Pacific coast intertidal zones: the pacific gaper, T. nuttallii, more abundant south to California; and the fat gaper, T. capax, more abundant north to Alaska. Both have oval and chalky-white or yellow shells with patches of brown periostracum (leather-like skin) on the shell. These clams are also commonly called gapers because their shells are flared around the siphon and do not completely close, rather like geoduck clams. Like geoducks, they are unable to completely retract the siphon within the shell, though less flagrantly as the siphon on Tresus species is not as large.

Identification

An easy way to tell the two species apart is that T. nuttallii usually has relatively longer, narrower shells (longer compared to height) and larger siphonal plates (horny plates found at the tip of the siphon, often with a little algae or barnacles garden). Hence T. capax is the fat gaper.

Habitat and lifestyle

Their habitat is the lower intertidal zones on out to waters as deep as 50–60 feet (13–15 m). They prefer sand, mud, and gravel substrates, normally burying themselves 12–16 inches (30–41 cm), so they are much easier to dig than geoducks. Their preferred substrates are also preferred by butter and littleneck clams, so horse clams are often taken incidentally in commercial harvesting.

Horse clams often have a relationship with small commensal pea crabs, Pinnixa faba, often a mating pair, which enter through the large siphon and live within the mantle cavity of the horse clam.[2][3] The crabs are easily seen and in no way affect the clam as food. The meat is good and makes excellent chowder. They tend to be ignored by sport diggers in Washington but not in Oregon.

Horse clams are broadcast spawners like geoducks; T. nuttalii spawns in summer and T. capax in winter.[4]

Harvesting for food

Appreciated by pre-contact local Native Americans for their size, abundance, and relatively easy capture, they are less sought today than geoducks, which have gained a marketing cachet.

Identification is important. Best recipes vary with species. For resource sustainability, the Washington State Department of Fish and Wildlife [1] sets size and bag limits for these clams. The Department of Health sometimes closes beaches for public health and safety. The Department of Health Marine Biotoxin web site [2] has current information.

King County has a well-illustrated clam identification procedure [3].[5]

Some clammers find horse clams are not as tasty as others, so it's not unusual during clamming season to find horse clams left behind on the beach. The shells are more fragile than they might appear, so it is critical that they not be damaged when first digging if they are not kept. The clams will soon die if abandoned. The adults are unable to rebury themselves—they need the pressure of their surroundings to remain intact and maneuver. They can't hold their two big valves together, protecting their soft tissues. Responsible diggers carefully rebury them to about the depth at which the clams were found.

Prehistorical exploitation

Early exploitation of horse clams is known by Native Americans on the Pacific Ocean coast of California. For example, archaeological recovery from Chumash sites in San Luis Obispo County has revealed use of horse clam shells as a scoop implement. An unusually well decorated specimen was found at the present day town of Morro Bay during archaeological excavation.[6]

Notes and references

  1. ^ Tresus capax (Gould, 1850). Retrieved through: World Register of Marine Species on 23 September 2010.
  2. ^ Beach watchers
  3. ^ G.E. MacGinite & N. MacGinite, Natural History of Marine Animals (Second Edition), McGraw-Hill Book Company, 1968, at p. 313.
  4. ^ (1) "Shellfish". Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife. 2000. Retrieved 2006-08-06.
    (2) Nash
  5. ^ Brenner
  6. ^ C.M.Hogan, 2008

Bibliography

Further reading

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Tresus capax: Brief Summary ( İngilizce )

wikipedia EN tarafından sağlandı

Tresus capax is a species of saltwater clam, marine bivalve mollusk, common name the fat gaper, in the family Mactridae. It also shares the common name horse clam with Tresus nuttallii a species which is similar in morphology and lifestyle. Both species are somewhat similar to the geoduck (Panopea generosa, which is in the family Hiatellidae), though smaller, with shells up to eight inches long (20 cm), weight to 3–4 lb (1.4–1.8 kg).

The two species commonly known as horse clams inhabit the Pacific coast intertidal zones: the pacific gaper, T. nuttallii, more abundant south to California; and the fat gaper, T. capax, more abundant north to Alaska. Both have oval and chalky-white or yellow shells with patches of brown periostracum (leather-like skin) on the shell. These clams are also commonly called gapers because their shells are flared around the siphon and do not completely close, rather like geoduck clams. Like geoducks, they are unable to completely retract the siphon within the shell, though less flagrantly as the siphon on Tresus species is not as large.

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Tresus capax ( Felemenkçe; Flemish )

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Tresus capax is een tweekleppigensoort uit de familie van de Mactridae.[1] De wetenschappelijke naam van de soort is voor het eerst geldig gepubliceerd in 1850 door Gould.

Bronnen, noten en/of referenties
  1. Huber, M. (2012). Tresus capax (Gould, 1850). Geraadpleegd via: World Register of Marine Species op http://www.marinespecies.org/aphia.php?p=taxdetails&id=367776
Geplaatst op:
09-03-2013
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