mussel
From: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
|
Date: 2008
mussel edible freshwater or marine bivalve mollusk. Mussels are able to move slowly by means of the muscular foot. They feed and breathe by filtering water through extensible tubes called siphons; a large mussel filters 10 gal (38 liters) of water per day. The close-fitting shells protect the mussel from desiccation and enable it to live high up on the shore. Most marine mussels belong to the single family, Mytilidae. They are widespread and are especially abundant in cooler seas. They form extensive, crowded beds, anchoring themselves by the byssus, a secretion of strong threads. The blue mussel grows up to 3 in. (7.6 cm) and is common along the Atlantic coast; the smaller hooked mussel has a more southerly range. The horse mussel, found in deeper waters, grows to 6 in. (15 cm) in length. Freshwater mussels are chiefly of two kinds: the large, dark-shelled burrowing mussels, a source of pearls and of mother-of-pearl; and the tiny "fingernail clams" found on the bottoms of clear pools and brooks. The zebra mussel, Dreissen polymorpha, is a freshwater mussel native to Europe that was introduced in the 1980s into the Great Lakes. Lacking natural predators, it has proliferated and spread, clogging intake pipes at water and power facilities and disrupting native ecosystems. Freshwater mussels (family Unionidae), sometimes called clams , pass through a parasitic larval state, living on the fins, gills, and bodies of fishes. The familiar jingle shells, delicate, shiny orange or yellow shells common on beaches, belong to the same order as the marine mussel. Mussels are classified in the phylum Mollusca , class Pelecypoda or Bivalvia, order Filibranchia.
Author not available, MUSSEL.,
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press
For permission to reuse this article, contact Copyright Clearance Center.
Related articles from HighBeam Research:
|
Occurrence and distribution of freshwater mussels in small streams of Tippecanoe County, Indiana.(Statistical Data Included)
Proceedings of the Indiana Academy of Science; 1/1/2001; Myers-Kinzie, Melody L. Wente, Stephen P. Spacie, Anne; 4731 words;
ABSTRACT. A mussel survey was conducted at 52 sites in 12 stream ... Middle Fork of Wildcat Creek. Evidence of 28 mussel species was found during the survey; 17 species were found live. Of all live mussels, 58% were Lampilis siliquoidea (fatmucket ...
|
|
Development and Assessment of a Sampling Design for Mussel Assemblages in Large Streams
The American Midland Naturalist; 4/1/2005; Christian, Alan D; Harris, John L; 4381 words;
ABSTRACT.- Freshwater mussel beds of the lower 68 km of the Cache ... and species richness. A total of 38 mussel beds were delineated, 14 major beds ... mbeds), and defined by areal extent and mussel density. Analysis of our sampling precision ...
|
|
Effects of hypoxia and low-frequency agitation byssogenesis in the freshwater mussel Dreissena polymorpha (Pallas).
The Biological Bulletin; 12/1/1996; Clarke, Michael McMahon, Robert F.; 4797 words;
Introduction The zebra mussel, Dreissena polymorpha (Pallas 1771 ... holdfast as an adult has made the zebra mussel a damaging macrofouling pest species ... rate of byssogenesis in marine byssate mussels such as Mytilus edulis L., Geukensia ...
|
|
Mussel Assemblages in a Developing Oxbow and a Newly-cut Channel of the Neosho River, Kansas
The American Midland Naturalist; 10/1/2004; Sherraden-Chance, Stephanie A; Edds, David R; 5217 words;
ABSTRACT.- We compared freshwater mussel assemblages (Bivalvia: Unionidae) in a ... River, Kansas, during 2001. We sampled mussels at approximately 1.5 km intervals, totaling ... We found 1239 live individuals of 20 mussel species in the old channel and 20 live ...
|
|
Freshwater mussel (Bivalvia: Unionidae) survey of the Brouilletts Creek basin in Illinois and Indiana.
Proceedings of the Indiana Academy of Science; 8/15/2005; Tiemann, Jeremy S.; 5934 words;
ABSTRACT. The freshwater mussel assemblage of Brouilletts Creek basin ... Wabash River ********** Freshwater mussels (Bivalvia: Unionidae) are a vital component ... Noturus spp.). In addition, freshwater mussels help stabilize stream substrate against ...
|
|
The unionid mussel fauna of northeastern Ohio's Grand River (1).
The Ohio Journal of Science; 6/1/2005; Huehner, Martin K. Krebs, Robert A. Zimmerman, Gregory Mejia, Melissa; 4116 words;
... headwaters. Part II contrasts changes in the mussel fauna over the past half century plus. Further ... section. The search strategy employed to locate mussel populations was to move downstream while observing ... available habitat, and to determine whether mussels were present. If suitable habitat was ...
|
|
The Mussels of Muddy Creek on Erie National Wildlife Refuge
Northeastern Naturalist; 10/1/2006; Mohler, Jerre W; Morrison, Patricia; Haas, Jeff; 3576 words;
Abstract - A qualitative mussel survey was performed on Muddy Creek ... Villosa fabalis. The high diversity of mussels along with the presence of federally ... is widely recognized that freshwater mussels in North America are an important component ...
|
|
Freshwater Mussel Status: Upper North Fork Holston River, Virginia
Northeastern Naturalist; 1/1/2007; Jones, Jess W; Neves, Richard J; 2749 words;
... development, and contains a relatively intact mussel fauna that has not received obvious anthropogenic impacts. Several endangered mussel species occur in this section, including the ... which also occurs in the upper river. Because mussel populations in the upper river have not been ... to determine the ...
|
|
Farmers flex their mussels
The Press; 9/17/2005; CREAN, Mike; 1289 words;
The mussel-farming industry is on the rise, but it ... reports. . Canterbury farming is flexing its mussels. It is promising, and delivering, big things ... with world demand for our green-lipped mussels, the Pegasus Bay project will provide a ...
|
|
Ionic and acid-base consequences of exposure to increased salinity in the zebra mussel, Dreissena polymorpha.
The Biological Bulletin; 8/1/2006; Byrne, R.A. Dietz, T.H.; 7424 words;
Introduction The zebra mussel, Dreissena polymorpha (Pallas, 1771 ... sub.2] in a salt solution similar to mussel blood at the experimental temperature ... hemolymph ion and acid-base variables in mussels incubated in 10% ASW for 7 days and ...
|
|
Diversity and relative abundance of preimpoundment freshwater mussel (Bivalvia: Unionidae) populations in the lower Holston River, Tennessee.
Journal of the Tennessee Academy of Science; 7/1/2006; Parmalee, Paul W. Faust, Hugh D.; 3349 words;
ABSTRACT -- A series of freshwater mussel valves was collected from six preimpoundment ... feeding activity. A total of 8,460 mussel valves, representing 49 species, was identified. Approximately 80 freshwater mussel species and subspecies have been reported ...
|
|
THE EFFECT OF TEMPERATURE ON THE RESPIRATION OF THE FRESHWATER MUSSEL LAMPSILIS SILIQUOIDEA (BIVALVIA: UNIONIDAE).
Proceedings of the Indiana Academy of Science; 1/1/1999; Myers-Kinzie, Melody; 2111 words;
ABSTRACT: The respiration of the freshwater mussel Lampsilis siliquoidea (fatmucket) was ... consumption, unionid. INTRODUCTION Freshwater mussels (Bivalvia: Unionidae) are an integral ... aquatic communities. Surveys of unionid mussels in North America have documented declines ...
|
|
Cause of zebra mussel die-off is unclear
The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel; 10/25/2001; MEG JONES; 894 words;
Cause of zebra mussel die-off is unclear Experts see deaths as temporary ... Sentinel staff Thursday, October 25, 2001 Zebra mussels -- those hated, plankton-gobbling aquatic pests ... creatures. Whatever the culprit, it's good news because the zebra mussel has been wreaking havoc on the ...
|
|
Freshwater mussel (Bivalvia: Unionidae) survey of the Wakarusa River basin, Kansas.
Transactions of the Kansas Academy of Science; 9/22/2006; Tiemann, Jeremy S.; 4551 words;
... past since the last extensive freshwater mussel (Bivalvia: Unionidae) survey of the Wakarusa ... might have occurred in the freshwater mussel assemblage since the last survey, I sampled freshwater mussels by hand grabbing in a haphazard manner ...
|
|
Multiplying mussels threaten waters
Deseret News (Salt Lake City); 3/22/2007; Ray Grass Deseret Morning News; 768 words;
A zebra mussel is no larger than the tip of a man's finger ... large as Lake Powell -- but it is. A single mussel can produce upward of a million young a year. A year later, that one zebra mussel could be responsible for a trillion descendents ...
|
See all results from premium newspaper and magazine articles, images, maps and more at HighBeam Research.
Related articles from newspapers, magazines and other sources:
Changes in the biodiversity of mussel assemblages induced by two methods of cultivation.
Journal of Shellfish Research; 4/1/2007; Murray, L.G. Newell, C.R. Seed, R.; 6994 words;
|
Comparison of assimilation efficiency on diets of nine phytoplankton species of the greenshell mussel Perna canaliculus.
Journal of Shellfish Research; 12/1/2006; Ren, Jeffrey S. Ross, Alex H. Hayden, Barbara J.; 6090 words;
|
Genotype-dependent survival, growth, and production in cultured blue mussels, Mytilus SPP.: results of a reciprocal seed transfer experiment.
Journal of Shellfish Research; 8/1/2006; Penney, R.W. Hart, M.J. Templeman, N.D.; 7168 words;
|
Range and dispersal of a tropical marine invader, the Asian green mussel, Perna viridis, in subtropical waters of the southeastern United States.
Journal of Shellfish Research; 8/1/2007; Baker, Patrick Fajans, Jonathan S. Arnold, William S. Ingrao, Debra A. Marelli, Dan C. Baker, Shirley M.; 10706 words;
|
Variation in thermal tolerance among three Mississippi river populations of the zebra mussel, Dreissena polymorpha.
Journal of Shellfish Research; 1/1/2005; Elderkin, Curt L. Klerks, Paul L.; 4690 words;
|
Reproductive cycle of coexisting mussels, Mytilus californianus and Mytilus galloprovincialis, in Baja California, New Mexico.
Journal of Shellfish Research; 8/1/2004; Curiel-Ramirez, Sergio Caceres-Martinez, Jorge; 3512 words;
|
Mini-review: distribution of the Mediterranean mussel Mytilus galloprovincialis (Bivalvia: Mytilidae) and hybrids in the Northeast Pacific.
Journal of Shellfish Research; 8/1/2004; Wonham, Marjorie J.; 6831 words;
|
Gametogenesis in the non-native green mussel, Perna viridis, and the native scorched mussel, Brachidontes exustus, in Tampa Bay, Florida.
Journal of Shellfish Research; 12/1/2005; Barber, Bruce J. Fajans, Jonathan S. Baker, Shirley M. Baker, Patrick; 5679 words;
|
Molecular characterization of the Chilean blue mussel (Mytilus chilensis Hupe 1854) demonstrates evidence for the occurrence of Mytilus galloprovincialis in southern Chile.
Journal of Shellfish Research; 12/1/2005; Toro, Jorge E. Ojeda, Johana A. Vergara, Ana M. Castro, Grace C. Alcapan, Angelica C.; 4016 words;
|
Flow reduction, seston depletion, meat content and distribution of diarrhetic shellfish toxins in a long-line blue mussel (Mytilus edulis) farm.
Journal of Shellfish Research; 1/1/2005; Strohmeier, T. Aure, J. Duinker, A. Castberg, T. Svardal, A. Strand, O.; 5144 words;
|
|
|