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					Bivalves from Australia
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					11-20-2009, 08:44 PM,  
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| Bivalves from Australia 
					Hello, I need help to identify the bivalves below. They are all from South-western Australia (i.e. temperate waters). Sizes range between 11 and 29 mm. I have no clue of the family of little #2. Ta again. Pierre. <img src="http://www.conchylinet.com/Images/Misc/wabival091120.jpg" alt="http://www.conchylinet.com/Images/Misc/wabival091120.jpg" style="border:0" /> | |||
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					11-21-2009, 02:42 PM,  
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| Bivalves from Australia 
					1. I believe this is Fulvia scalata 2. Myllita deshayesi 3. Looks like Mactra australis 4. ? 5. Looks like a Donax. May be Donax cuneatus. Â <span class="petit">--Last edited by Paul Monfils on 2009-11-21 05:45:56 --</span> | |||
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					11-22-2009, 12:46 PM,  
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| Bivalves from Australia 
					Thanks Paul, thanks Mike, After some googling about the Fulvia it seems that F. scalata does not occurs in southern Australia. Can it be a juvenile of an other Fulvia specie ? I got some M. australis and they dont look like #3. That one looks rather like a Mesodesmatidae or why not a Donacidae (but D. faba is a tropical specie). Can #4 be a juvenile Pitar or Periglypta ? Anyway thanks a lot for your investigations. Pierre | |||
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					11-22-2009, 03:48 PM,  
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| Bivalves from Australia 
					#4 could be a juvenile Tapes turgida. I have Allen's 'Australian shells' and it is the only thing I can find that is similar from that locality. Likewise #5 could be a juvenile Plebidonax deltoides, again I can find nothing else similar from there. #3 does resemble Atactodea striata but I don't believe that is found in S. Australia. Dave | |||
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					11-22-2009, 08:30 PM,  
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| Bivalves from Australia 
					3. Have to disagree with Paul on the Mactra australis. The shell seems to lack the V-shaped hinge teeth specific to Mactridae. This shell could be a Donacidae (Donax faba?). 4. Some kind of Veneridae, may be a Tapes or Pitar species. Mike | |||
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					11-25-2009, 06:55 PM,  
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| Bivalves from Australia 
					#1 seems to be Fulvia tenuicostata (Lamarck, 1819). Look at that gallery <a href="http://www.conchology.be/?t=66&family=CARDIIDAE&species=Fulvia%20tenuicostata" target="_blank"><!-- m --><a class="postlink" href="http://www.conchology.be/?t=66&family=CARDIIDAE&species=Fulvia%20tenuicostata">http://www.conchology.be/?t=66&family=C ... nuicostata</a><!-- m --></a>
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