The shells of spiny pink scallops are ribbed with spines and can reach up to 2.4 inches across. The mantle edge has many small tentacles and tiny blue eyes for detecting light.
Habitat
Mostly found subtidally on rocky, sandy or shell-hash bottoms to depths of 500 feet
Diet
Scallops are filter feeders, drawing in water and collecting plankton with their gills.
Life History
Spiny scallops reproduce by broadcast spawning once a year in July or August. The free-swimming larvae are called veligers and they spend 40 days feeding on phytoplankton before settling to undergo metamorphosis. Can live up to 6 years.
IUCN Status
Not Evaluated
Ecosystem & Cultural Importance
These clams provide a home to 2 species of encrusting sponges, which are only found on scallop shells: the orange or yellow encrusting sponge Myxilla incrustans and the brown or purple sponge Mycale adherens. This is thought to be a mutualistic symbiosis because the sponges make it harder for predatory sea stars to get a grip on the scallop, and the scallop will also swim away from predators that would eat the sponges. Predators include sea otters, octopuses, and a variety of sea stars, including the false ochre star, sunflower star, and the rose star.
These swimming scallops can produce byssal threads to anchor themselves to surfaces. Usually lie with their left valve upwards.
This is their more brightly colored valve with the heaviest sponge growth.
This scallop escapes threats by clapping its shell together and swimming away by jet propulsion. An average swim lasts 9 seconds and moves the scallop almost 5 feet.
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