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ERROR : Server Busy(-1105) Mya arenaria (sand gaper) Mya arenaria, with shell 0.4 mm. long, removed from attachment to seaweed (Enteromorpha) and showing the single, branched byssus-thread (b) arising from a byssus gland at base of foot (f). The filmy siphons (s) are shown protracted
 Subject: Clams, Mya arenaria
 Tag: Shellfish
 Date	1901
 Source/Photographer
 English: Kellogg, James L. (1901) Observations on the Life-History of the Common Clam, Mya Arenaria, Bulletin of the United States Fish Commission, vol. 19, 1899, Washington, DC: Government Printing Office
 Author	James Lawrence Kellogg  (1866–1938)
 Source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File%3AFMIB_40485_Mya_arenaria%2C_with_shell_04_mm_long%2C_removed_from_attachment_to_seaweed_%28Enteromorpha%29_and_showing_the_single%2C_branched_byssus.jpeg
 
 
 Mya arenaria
 - common names: sand gaper,  soft-shell clam, softshells, steamer clam, Ipswich clam, Essex clam
 
 Sand gaper (Mya arenaria) is a species of edible saltwater clam, a marine bivalve mollusk in the family Myidae. It has a thin and fragile shell that gapes open at one end, and long siphons that can extend up to the surface of the sediment where it lives. Sand gapers are found on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean, as well as the Pacific Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea. It is a popular food item in some regions, especially in New England, where it is often steamed or fried.
 
 Order:	Myida
 Superfamily:	Myoidea
 Family:	Myidae
 Genus:	Mya
 Species:	Mya arenaria Linnaeus, 1758
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