Clams, in general, don't care for their young at all. Their eggs are cast around by currents, eventually finding places to settle into.
William Lackner has written: 'Digging razor clams in Oregon' -- subject(s): Clamming, Razor clams 'Oregon's razor clams' -- subject(s): Razor clams
no razor clams usually live from the low water line out about 2km into the sea around the coast
dice has no chest hair
50
just fergin look it up on google jeez....
Clams have no bones, including backbone's. No backbone= invertebrate.
they filter feed. eating microscopic food that passes in the currents.
besides people, a variety of snails, crabs, and other crustaceans
No, clams do not care for their young. In these bivalves, the eggs are not even kept by the parent or parents. They are "cast to the wind" or, more correctly, into the ocean, lake or river currents, depending on which species they are. They become tiny free-swimming creatures in most cases, and then find a place to settle and turn into the bivalve with which we are familiar. Needless to say, many of the clams in their free-swimming form do not survive, but become food for other ocean creatures. Links can be found below.
They are invertebrate's because the have an exoskeleton
The short answer is "no". The Longer AnswerEvery mollusk can theoretically grow natural pearls. But pearls from mollusks such as clams are very rare, and they are not actually considered pearls. Clams are not nacreous so they do not excrete the combination of aragonite and calcite known as nacre which is the building block of pearls. Their excretions instead are known as calcareous concretions. These "pearls" are not usually of much value and only hold a place in the collectors' market.
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