Myochama Explained

Myochama is a genus of bivalves in the family Myochamidae. They are restricted to the waters off southeastern Australia and New Zealand.

Description

Myochama exhibit cementation where one valve is fixed to some hard substrate – similarly as oysters. In Myochama, it is the right valve that gets cemented, typically to the posterior region of shells of large infaunal bivalves. In Myochama anomioides, this happens when the shell is few millimeters in height (range). The cemented right valve is thin and flat or slightly convex, whereas the left valve is robust and strongly concave.

Typical substrata for attachment include shells of Neotrigonia, Venericardia, and Glycymeris. Individuals that attach themselves to living objects tend to do so at smaller sizes than those attaching to inanimate objects (e.g., dead shells, rocks).

Myochama probably have direct development (i.e., there are no free-living larvae).

Species

There are four extant species:

There are also three species only known from the fossil record: