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  3. Moon clams are really, really weird.

Moon clams are really, really weird.

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clamfacts
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  • dantheclamman@scicomm.xyzD This user is from outside of this forum
    dantheclamman@scicomm.xyzD This user is from outside of this forum
    dantheclamman@scicomm.xyz
    wrote last edited by
    #1

    Moon clams are really, really weird. They live with their shell permanently open on their back like a snail, and move around on their foot. Their soft mantle extends over their shell, so they end up looking a lot like cowry snails. They are found in Western Australia, where they live symbiotically in the burrows built by shrimp. Many members of their superfamily, Galeommatoidea, are symbiotic with other creatures. Some others in the family can also use their foot for snail-like locomotion, but moon clams are unique in how much they're committed to the "nothing to see here, I'm a snail" bit. Just weird little guys! #clamFacts
    https://www.colorado.edu/today/2026/04/10/moon-clam-vies-mollusk-year-thanks-cu-researcher

    szescstopni@circumstances.runS 1 Reply Last reply
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    • dantheclamman@scicomm.xyzD dantheclamman@scicomm.xyz

      Moon clams are really, really weird. They live with their shell permanently open on their back like a snail, and move around on their foot. Their soft mantle extends over their shell, so they end up looking a lot like cowry snails. They are found in Western Australia, where they live symbiotically in the burrows built by shrimp. Many members of their superfamily, Galeommatoidea, are symbiotic with other creatures. Some others in the family can also use their foot for snail-like locomotion, but moon clams are unique in how much they're committed to the "nothing to see here, I'm a snail" bit. Just weird little guys! #clamFacts
      https://www.colorado.edu/today/2026/04/10/moon-clam-vies-mollusk-year-thanks-cu-researcher

      szescstopni@circumstances.runS This user is from outside of this forum
      szescstopni@circumstances.runS This user is from outside of this forum
      szescstopni@circumstances.run
      wrote last edited by
      #2

      @dantheclamman It doesn't have a page on Wikepedia, so it doesn't exist (Almost none of the Galeomatidae have a page on Wikipedia, and the Galeomatidae page doesn't even have a redlink to Ephippodonta lunata)

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