Habitat.— Labrador to New York.
The Basket Cockle (C. corbis, Mart.) is the most abundant and familiar cockle on the west coast. The end view is the ex act outline of a St. Valentine heart. The beaks meet, the lips interlock their crenulated margins; the surfaces are finely striated across the close, rounded ribs. The shells are brittle, often broken when picked up on the beach. The mollusks are eaten, and are sufficiently abundant to appear in the markets north of California. Diameter, 3 to 4 inches.
Habitat.— Japan to Alaska, southward to San Diego, Cal.
Habitat.— Pacific coast.
The Great Cockle (C. datum, Sby.) has a very ventricose strong shell with yellow shining surface scored with deep grooves. It is the largest of American cockles, attaining six inches in diameter.
Habitat.— Panama to Santa Barbara, Cal.
The Ribbed Cockle (C. costatum, Linn.) has scarcely a dis tinctive name in a genus where all shells are ribbed. This species shows an elegance of sculpture that is unexampled in the forms described above. The deep, grooved and ridged sulci are few, because they are so large; the sharp-edged ridges, similarly chis elled with secondary ridges, are few and well apart. The nine
ribs converge in elevated beaks that meet over a straight hinge line. The shells are thin, almost translucent, the white surface 359 The Cockles. Heart Shells bears a brown marginal band, and the sulci are brown. Length, 3 or 4 inches.
Habitat.—East coast of Africa.
Genus LIOCARDIUM, Swains.
Shell oval, elongated, oblique, inequilateral; surface smooth.
Habitat.— Cape Hatteras southward.
The Egg Shell Cockle (L. substriatum, Conr.) thin, show ing only faint remnants of ribs, is splotched, especially within, with reddish brown, as certain birds' eggs are. The valves are circular with elevated beaks. Diameter, i to i i inches.
Habitat.— California.
Genus SERRIPES, Beck.
Shell subcordate, compressed, thin, almost equilateral; sur face with obsolete, radiating ribs; beaks prominent; cardinal hinge teeth wanting.
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