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Feeding and cleaning mechanisms in the suspension feeding bivalve Mytilus edulis

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Abstract

Feeding and pseudofeces formation were studied in intact Mytilus edulis clearing suspensions of graphite particles, and the processes were compared with activities observed in mussels with a severed adductor muscle. Most particulate material in the stomach was present in the suspended state. Ingestion of particles in suspension could take place concurrently with the production of pseudofeces. Severing of the adductor muscle resulted in profuse secretion of mucus that gradually subsided to a constant low level. Addition of graphite particles at concentrations that did not cause mucus secretion in the intact mussels strongly stimulated secretion in the operated mussels, resulting in the accumulation of highly viscid, mucusparticle aggregates. These aggregates were mechanically stable, in contrast to the fragile pseudofeces. It is indicated that normal feeding depends upon hydromechanical mechanisms that produce highly concentrated suspensions of particles for ingestion, and that mucociliary mechanisms serve to clean the gills and other organs of the mantle cavity for excess particulate material. It is further indicated that intact mussels secrete mucus only in the amounts needed to consolidate excess particulate material, and that lesions affect the normal balance between particles in suspension and mucus secretion by enhancing the sensitivity of the mechanisms that control mucus secretion.

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Communicated by T. Fenchel, Aarhus

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Barker Jørgensen, C. Feeding and cleaning mechanisms in the suspension feeding bivalve Mytilus edulis . Mar. Biol. 65, 159–163 (1981). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00397081

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