skimmerless
New member
I would like to relate my horror story. I don't know if this is what is happening to your clam, but it is worth a look.
I have a teardrop maxima that displayed some cupping and then retraction over the last several days. He had slowly worked himself into a crevice and I figured that he couldn't open up fully.
Yesterday evening I pulled the clam out of the crevice and found that he wasn't attached. He was attached a week ago. I got suspicious and inspected the clam and found a single pyram snail in a crevice. I set him in an empty bucket to locate a brush. It took a couple of minutes to locate said brush but when I turned the clam over I noticed some movement from the opening to the byssal gland and as I moved closer, a horrible low tide smell. I moved the threads aside with the brush and a claw appeared, then the organism retracted into the clam.
I splashed some freshwater into this area and out pops a gravid shrimp. It was about three quarters of an inch long, clear with black spots and green eggs. Some of the tissue from the opening was almost severed. I don't know whether the clam will survive, but he seems better today than yesterday.
I have a teardrop maxima that displayed some cupping and then retraction over the last several days. He had slowly worked himself into a crevice and I figured that he couldn't open up fully.
Yesterday evening I pulled the clam out of the crevice and found that he wasn't attached. He was attached a week ago. I got suspicious and inspected the clam and found a single pyram snail in a crevice. I set him in an empty bucket to locate a brush. It took a couple of minutes to locate said brush but when I turned the clam over I noticed some movement from the opening to the byssal gland and as I moved closer, a horrible low tide smell. I moved the threads aside with the brush and a claw appeared, then the organism retracted into the clam.
I splashed some freshwater into this area and out pops a gravid shrimp. It was about three quarters of an inch long, clear with black spots and green eggs. Some of the tissue from the opening was almost severed. I don't know whether the clam will survive, but he seems better today than yesterday.