Marteilia parasites are a group of protists that infect bivalve mollusks, such as mussels, oysters, and cockles. These parasites can cause significant health issues in their hosts, leading to mass ...
Tennessee decided to award a tiny marine creature, which lived in warm, ancient seas millions of years ago, the title of ...
European auditors have identified a potential conflict of interest risk related to the monitoring of bivalve mollusks in New Zealand. The audit by DG Sante took place remotely and onsite in April ...
From games to sweet treats to flowers to traditional attire, the nostalgic elements of Tết often tug people to the past.
Because filter-feeding bivalves and mollusks take all their nutrients from filtering seawater, they are an excellent choice for a sustainable form of aquaculture that is helping to take pressure ...
The invasive golden mussel, scientifically known as Limnoperna fortunei, is a freshwater bivalve mollusk that has caused significant ecological and economic impacts since its introduction to South ...
When pearls are cultured commercially an irritant is manually inserted into a mollusc to promote the production of mother-of-pearl. Nacre can form naturally around almost any irritant that gets inside ...
A heart-shaped mollusc has evolved tiny windows that work like fibre-optic cables, the first known example in nature. Heart cockles (Corculum cardissa) are bivalve molluscs a bit like clams that ...
DESCRIPTION: Freshwater mussels are bivalve mollusks that have a two- valved hard shell, a soft body with respiratory, digestive and reproductive organs, and a muscular foot for locomotion, burrowing ...
Bivalves are invertebrate animals that belong to a group known as molluscs. They have a shell that’s made up of two halves, known as valves, which are joined by a hinge. Bivalves will usually clamp ...
These hinge shelled molluscs have quietly embraced the lower ... may need to make these shellfish a larger part of our diet. “Bivalves have the remarkable potential to provide people with ...
the curator of fossil bivalves at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History, said that Punk and Emo’s bizarre appearances shook up a long-held understanding of how mollusks evolved.