- Corbula Australis.
- C. sulcata.
- C. erythrodon.
- C. ovalina.
- C. semen.
- C. Taitensis.
- C. nucleus.
- C. impressa.
- C. porcina.
- · · · · ·
- C. contracta.*
2. Genus Pandora. Pl. [VI].
Animal. Body much compressed, somewhat elongated, in form of a furrow, in consequence of the union of the edges of the mantle, and its continuation with the tubes, which are united and short; foot small, thickest in front, and issuing through a tolerably large cleft in the mantle.
Shell. Regular, white, elongated, much compressed, inequivalved, inequilateral; right or upper valve quite flat, with a fold; summits feebly marked; hinge anomalous, formed by a transverse cardinal tooth on the right; valve entering a corresponding cavity in the left; ligament internal, oblique, triangular, inserted in a somewhat deep pit, with edges a little projecting on each valve; two round muscular impressions. Inhabits the Mediterranean, British, and American seas. Four living species, and two fossils, according to Defrance.
- Pandora rostrata.
- P. obtusa.
- · · · · ·
- P. trilineata.*
- P. punctata.*
FAMILY VII.
Lithophaga. Three genera.
1. Genus Saxicava. Pl. [VI].
Animal. Long, subcylindrical, the mantle closed in all parts, prolonged behind by two long tubes, thick and close together externally, pierced interiorly and in front with a round orifice, for the passage of a very small foot; mouth very large; labial appendages small; branchial laminæ free, the external pair much shorter than the internal.
Lamarck has thought proper to remove this genus from the Mytilus; it possesses the faculty, like the Pholas, of penetrating rocks and substances, and cannot be extracted but by breaking the substance in which it is imbedded.
Shell. Thick, with an epidermis, a little irregular, elongated, subcylindrical, obtuse at both ends; summits feebly marked; hinge toothless, or with a very small rudimentary tooth; ligament external, somewhat inflated; two round muscular impressions distinct, and several others irregular. Inhabits the British and American seas, in cavities, which they bore in rocks or wood. Nine species.