Abstract

The shallow subtidal mactrid bivalve Mactrinula reevesii is a deposit‐feeder in the southern and south‐eastern oceanic waters of Hong Kong. Buried obliquely, large quantities of fine sediment are taken into the mantle cavity and sorted on enormous labial palps. The small ctenidia probably have little value in collecting material, amounts taken in being too large. The mid gut is long and complexly folded inside the visceral mass. It is also capable of distension, although superficial visceral muscles maintain internal tonus. The rectum is narrow and creates compact faecal pellets.Most interest is in the ventral mantle margin which is, posterior to the pedal gape and the base of the inhalant siphon, united by a sheet of cuticle. There is no fourth pallial aperture. There are, however, two pairs of flaps extending along the posterior third of the internal ventral mantle surface. These arch over left and right mantle rejection tracts which transfer unwanted material to the base of the inhalant siphon for final expulsion. The mantle flaps prevent such material from being returned to the anterior end of the mantle cavity, for palp reprocessing, when new material arrives. They, thus, maximize sorting efficiency by separating unsorted from sorted and rejected material.Other mactrids have similar mantle flaps which they use in different ways, including the channelling of unwanted material to a fourth pallial aperture for expulsion, as in Lutraria lutraria. The Mactridae have thus evolved a unique method of increasing the efficiency of pseudofaecal waste rejection which has thereby facilitated the deposit‐feeding lifestyle by the diverse representatives of this family.

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