Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Animal Sciences Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

William & Mary

1982

Identification

Articles 1 - 1 of 1

Full-Text Articles in Animal Sciences

Preliminary Observations On The Usefulness Of Hinge Structures For Identification Of Bivalve Larvae, R. Lutz, J. Goodsell, M. Castagna, S. Chapman, C. Newell, H. Hidu, R. Mann, Et Al Jan 1982

Preliminary Observations On The Usefulness Of Hinge Structures For Identification Of Bivalve Larvae, R. Lutz, J. Goodsell, M. Castagna, S. Chapman, C. Newell, H. Hidu, R. Mann, Et Al

VIMS Articles

Difficulties associated with discrimination of bivalve larvae isolated from plankton samples have long hampered both applied and basic research efforts in estuarine and open coastal marine environments. The vast majority of practical barriers to identification of larval bivalves may be eliminated through routine optical microscopic examination of the hinge apparatus of disarticulated larval shells. Representative micrographs of various ontogenetic stages of larval hinge development are presented for 12 genera (Mytilus, Geukensia, Crassostrea, Placopecten. Argopecten. Mya, Spisula, Mulinia, Ensis, Arca, Arctica. and Mercenaria) from 9 bivalve superfamilies (Mytilacea, Ostreacea. Pectinacea, Myacea, Mactracea. Solenacea, Arcacea, Arcticacea. and Veneracea). The larval hinge apparatus …