Heart-cockle shells may work like fibre-optic cables
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Heart-cockle shells may work like fibre-optic cables

Oct 29, 2024

SLURPING OYSTERS from their shells may be a rare indulgence for humans, but these bivalve molluscs and their relatives, such as clams and mussels, slurp for a living. Most are filter feeders, ingesting microscopic organisms as well as debris from their aquatic environments. A handful of mollusc species, however, have formed symbiotic partnerships with algae that live within their tissues. These individuals augment their diet with sugars that their microscopic partners produce through photosynthesis.

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The conditions are hot, sulphurous and low in oxygen