Pecten excavatus

Pecten excavatus
Pected excavatus shell— left shell is shown in blue and is concave, right shell is shown in red and is highly convex
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Mollusca
Class: Bivalvia
Order: Ostreoida
Suborder: Pectinoida
Superfamily: Pectinoidea
Family: Pectinidae
Subfamily: Pectininae
Tribe: Pectinini
Genus: Pecten
Species: P. excavatus
Binomial name
Pecten excavatus
(Anton, 1838)
Synonyms
  • Pecten punctilatus Dunker, 1877
  • Pecten sinensis G.W Sowerby II, 1842

Pecten excavatus is a species of scallop, marine bivalve molluscs in the taxonomic family Pectinidae.

Shell description

In this species, the valves are greatly inequal and plano-convex in shape: the right valve is highly convex, and the left valve is correspondingly concave, an arrangement unusual within the scallop family. The valves are front-back symmetrical, however, and the ears are equal, convex, and rectangularly truncated.[1]

It can be distinguished from the very similar species Pecten albicans by the number of ribs present on either valve. P. albicans has in the range of seven to ten ribs with a mode of eight, while those of P. excavatus range from eight to eleven or more with an average number of ten.[2]

Distribution and habitat

This scallop prefers to inhabit fine, sandy bottoms 10-80 meters below the surface.[3]

References

  1. Ralph Arnold (1906). "Pleistocene Pectens". The Tertiary and Quaternary Pectens of California. U.S. Government Printing Office. 47: 135.
  2. "Unknown". Japanese Journal of Geology and Geography. Science Council of Japan. 32: 13. 1961.
  3. "Pecten". Quarterly Journal of the Taiwan Museum. 33: 93. 1980.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/12/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.