Among fishing gear in harbour.
Experimenting with new phone camera, not high res but passable. Better studio photos to be added later.
5th photo with Mactra stultorum for comparison. M.glauca umbo clearly directing off to the right while commoner M.stultorum more or less no orientation.
This is what was originally described as Allium ampeloprasum var. melitense, then promoted to species rank, Allium melitense
Differentiating Jingle shells
Valve morphology is highly variable, and an unreliable taxonomic feature.
The genera Anomia, Heteranomia and Pododesmus can be differentiated using gill morphology (Winckworth, 1922) and the number of the muscle scars on the upper valve.
Anomia: “W” shaped gill lamella, 3 muscles scars
Heteranomia: “U” shaped gill lamella, 2 muscle scars – scars smooth.
Pododesmus: “W” shaped gill lamella, 2 muscle scars – scars furrowed.
Species can sometimes be differentiated using the position of the muscle scars, though Holmes (2017) notes that it is not a consistent character in all species.
Holmes (2017) says “Heteranomia is cosmopolitan, monospecific and is represented by only Heteranomia squamula (Linnaeus 1758).” To me, this sounds like a species-complex waiting to be described, almost every “cosmopolitan, monospecific” species turns out to be morphologically similar sibling species. For now, any Jingle shell with a simple “U” shaped gill is Heteranomia squamula.
Examples
Obs shows the three scars of Anomia: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/11492415
Obs shows 2 scars, no furrows of Heteranomia: this obs
Obs show 2 scars & furrows of Pododesmus: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/73375218
Limonium albuferae, a new population created to save it from extinction. Someone please add this taxon
With Elatine brochonii. At present both probably disappeared due to the hypernitrification of the pond by slurry discharges.