They attach themselves to a rock at the bottom of harbours or open water in sandy or muddy environments.
They can be found all over the world. They live in the intertidal zone to the deep sea. They live where land and sea meet. And they can be found in the deepest darkest part of the ocean.
Yes, a live scallop is raw. However scallops are normally eaten cooked.
They live in the Carribean Sea in the Nuiritic Zone.
They have a mutual, symbiotic relationship. The sponge grows on the scallop and covers it completely protection the scallop and in return the scallop gives the sponge a place to live.
New Scandinavian Cooking - 2003 The World Is My Scallop - 4.6 was released on: USA: 2007
A live scallop looks like a clam or a pair of flat sea shells that are closed to create a cover for the scallop itself. On the exterior surface of the shells you can see a line of blue "eyes" or sensors. You can see a live scallop online at Sub Sea Observers.
yes an scallop is a mollusk
No, as a scallop is an invertebrate.
The Ramsay Scallop has 272 pages.
David Hardy has written: 'Scallop farming' -- subject(s): Scallop culture, Scallops 'The biology of scallop farming' -- subject(s): Ecology, Scallop culture, Scallop fisheries, Scallops
That is the correct spelling of "scallop" (a shellfish).
When you can see through the center of the scallop
yes an scallop is a mollusk