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Tag: molluscs

A most unusual sort of snail

Posted on 2022-06-052023-01-05 by Allison J. Gong

One of the many delightful animals in the rocky intertidal is the vermetid snail, Thylacodes squamigerus. Unlike their more typical gastropod relations, the vermetids don’t live in a shell, per se. Instead, they live in a calcareous tube, which forms a loose coil draped over the surface of a rock. The tubes can be up…

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In Memoriam

Posted on 2020-08-052023-01-05 by Allison J. Gong

On the afternoon of July 31, 2020 the world of invertebrate biology and marine ecology in California lost a giant in our field. Professor Emeritus John S. Pearse died after battling cancer and the aftereffects of a stroke. John was one of the very first people I met when I came to UC Santa Cruz….

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Emergence

Posted on 2020-07-312023-01-05 by Allison J. Gong

Every summer, like clockwork, my big female whelk lays eggs. She is one of a pair of Kellett’s whelks (Kellettia kellettii) that I inherited from a labmate many years ago now. True whelks of the family Buccinidae are predatory or scavenging snails, and can get pretty big. The female, the larger of the two I…

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Plants and algae as real estate

Posted on 2020-07-132023-01-05 by Allison J. Gong

I’ve written before about the rocky intertidal as a habitat where livable space is in short supply. Even areas of apparently bare rock prove to be, upon closer inspection, “owned” by some inhabitant or inhabitants. That cleared area in the mussel bed? Look closely, and you’ll likely find an owl limpet lurking on the edge…

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Making babies

Posted on 2020-06-122023-01-05 by Allison J. Gong

Every year, in June, my big whelk lays eggs. I have a mated pair of Kellettia kellettii living in a big tub at the marine lab. I inherited them from a lab mate many years ago now, and they’ve been nice pets. They’ve lived together forever, and make babies reliably. As June rolls around I…

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Unusual numbers of the usual suspects

Posted on 2020-05-082023-01-05 by Allison J. Gong

Today was the first time I’ve gone out on a low tide since before the whole COVID19 shelter-in-place mandates began. Looking back at my records, which I hadn’t done until today because it was much too depressing, I saw that my last time out was 22 February, when the low tides were in the afternoon….

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Tidepooling with visitors

Posted on 2020-01-132023-01-05 by Allison J. Gong

It has been a while since I’ve spent any time in the intertidal. There isn’t really any reason for this, other than a reluctance to venture out in the afternoon wind and have to fight encroaching darkness. There’s also the fact that I much prefer the morning low tides, which we’ll have in the spring….

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Now you see me, now you don’t

Posted on 2019-11-302023-01-05 by Allison J. Gong

The intertidal sculpins are delightful little fish with lots of personality. They’re really fun to watch, if you have the patience to sit still for a while and let them do their thing. A sculpin’s best defense is to not be seen, so their first instinct is to freeze where they are. Then, if a…

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A world beneath your feet

Posted on 2019-10-102023-01-05 by Allison J. Gong

When we stop to marvel at the wonders of the natural world, we usually forget about all the life that is going on that we don’t get to see. But there is a lot happening in places we forget to look. For example, any soil is an entire ecosystem, containing a variety of small and…

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Boring is anything but

Posted on 2019-07-022023-01-05 by Allison J. Gong

Be honest now. When you think of clams, what comes to mind? If you’re like most people, visions of clams steamed in white wine, garlic, and butter might dance in your head. Or perhaps clams in cioppino or a hearty chowder would be your go-to. In any case, I doubt that clams, as actual living…

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