Backyard and Beyond

Starting out from Brooklyn, an amateur naturalist explores our world.

As John Burroughs said, “The place to observe nature is where you are.”

Another beach

The Common slipper shell, Crepidula fornicata, a.k.a. boat shell, a marine gastropod, or snail, pilled up at the Jetties on Nantucket. A not particularly rocky area, the island’s surrounding waters present less than enough bases for these snails to attach onto, so they often attach to each other, in chains. The species name comes from the Latin fornix, meaning arched chamber, the same root as fornication.
The gulls think they’re delish.

An update 1/15/11: Many snail species are hermaphrodite. Crepidula species start out as male and then develop female characteristics as they mature. Also, the empty shells, a.k.a. Quarterdecks, are used commercially as a bedding for embryo oysters.

One response to “Another beach”

  1. […] Anadara ovalis, so called because the mollusk has red blood, which is most unusual for a mollusk; common slipper shell, Crepidula fornicata; both halves, or valves, of the quahog, or hard-shell clam, Mercenaria […]

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