Queen scallop

      Queen scallop
      View of right valve of Aequipecten opercularis
      Scientific classification
      Kingdom: Animalia
      Phylum: Mollusca
      Class: Bivalvia
      Order: Ostreoida
      Family: Pectinidae
      Genus: Aequipecten
      Species: A. opercularis
      Binomial name
      Aequipecten opercularis
      Synonyms[1]
      • Pecten opercularis Linnaeus, 1758

      The Queen Scallop, scientific name Aequipecten opercularis, is a medium-sized species of scallop, an edible marine bivalve mollusk in the family Pectinidae, the scallops.

      Several shells of Aequipecten opercularis.

      Description

      A beachworn left valve of Aequipecten opercularis from Wales

      At about 7 cm in size, this is one of the smaller scallop species that is commercially exploited. The shell of this species is sometimes quite colorful, and it is also thin and brittle. It has about twenty radiating umbones. The left valve is slightly more convex than the right one. One auricle of the right valve is larger than the other which creates a notch near the hinge used by the modified foot in young scallops to spin Byssal threads.[2] Older scallops are free swimming.

      ↑Jump back a section

      Life habits

      The queen scallop feeds on a diet of plankton, and is commonly found up to 40 metres below mean sea level, although it has been known to exist up to 400 metres below sea level. This species is distributed from Norway south to the Canary Islands and the Mediterranean and is common in the North Sea on beds of sand and gravel.[3]

      ↑Jump back a section

      Fishery around the Isle of Man

      The Isle of Man in the British Isles is famous for the queen scallop, or "Manx Queenie" as it is known locally. Due to the vagaries of landings over the years, Manx fishermen have worked on technical conservation regulations, in order to ensure that stocks of the queenie have remained robust. These have included restrictions on fishing times, closed seasons, and limitations on the number of dredges permitted. The Island also has two conservation areas in Manx waters; one has been in place since 1989 and the other was created in 2008; these areas are closed to mobile fishing. These conservation areas are supported by the fishing industry; the fishermen themselves started the initiative to create the Douglas closed area. Data analysis appears to support the viability of these areas, which appear to help ensure that the Manx queenie can be fished sustainably.

      "The Isle of Man Queenie Festival" [1] is an annual, week-long celebration of the Manx Queenie with many restaurants, hotels and pubs serving Queen Scallops on the menu. The Queenie Festival includes all kinds of events including sailing, diving, barbecues, beach days, sea swims, entertainment and plenty of Queen Scallops.

      "Isle of Man queenies have been awarded the European Union Protected Designation of Origin (PDO) stamp"

      ↑Jump back a section

      References

      1. ^ Rosenberg, Gary (2011). "Pecten opercularis (Linnaeus, 1758)". World Register of Marine Species. Retrieved 2012-02-20. 
      2. ^ Marine Species Identification Portal : Aequipecten opercularis
      3. ^ Marine Species Identification Portal : Aequipecten opercularis
      ↑Jump back a section

      Read in another language

      Last modified on 17 March 2013, at 03:08