Arca nodulosa Lightfoot, 1786 (invalid: junior homonym of Arca nodulosa O. F. Müller, 1776)
Arca obessa Kotaka, 1953
Tegillarca granosa bessalis Iredale, 1939
Tegillarca granosa (also known as Anadara granosa[2]) is a species of
ark clam known as the blood cockle or blood clam due to the red
haemoglobin liquid inside the
soft tissues. It is found throughout the
Indo-Pacific region from the eastern coast of
South Africa northwards and eastwards to
Southeast Asia,
Australia,
Polynesia, and up to northern
Japan. It lives mainly in the
intertidal zone at one to two metres water depth, burrowed down into sand or mud. Adult size is about 5 to 6 cm long and 4 to 5 cm wide.[3]
The meat of this bivalve is served steamed, boiled, roasted, or traditionally raw.
Anatomy
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adding to it. (November 2023)
Right and left valve of the same specimen:
Right valve
Left valve
Human use
Aquaculture
It has a high economic value as food, and it is
aquacultured. On the coast of
Zhejiang Province alone, blood cockle plantations occupy around 145,000 mu (about 100 km2) of mudflats.[5] These clams are raised in the river estuaries of the neighboring
Fujian Province as well.[4]
In
Indonesia, blood cockles (local: kerang darah) are quite popular food and are served as various dishes including boiled, deep fried or sauteed. [7]
Safety
Some sources of blood cockle may not undergo the
depuration process. Therefore, certain styles of preparation, such as the
poaching commonly carried out in Shanghai, can leave many pathogens present.[8]
^Pathansali, D. (1966). Notes on the biology of the cockle, Anadara granosa L. Proc. Indo-Pacific Fish. Counc. 11:84-98
^
ab
Ruǎn Jīnshān; Li Xiùzhū; Lín Kèbīng; Luō Dōnglián; Zhōu Chén; Cài Qīnghǎi (阮金山;李秀珠;林克冰;罗冬莲;周宸;蔡清海),
安海湾南岸滩涂养殖贝类死亡原因调查分析 (Analysis of the causes of death of farmed shellfish on the mudflats in the southern part of Anhai Bay), 《福建水产》 (Fujian Aquaculture), 2005-04
^泥蚶抗高氨氮、高硫化物家系选育 (Breeding mud cockle varieties resistant to high-nitrogen, high-sulfide environment). (The numbers are as of 2009)
Leung KF. & Morton B. (2003). Effects of long-term anthropogenic perturbations on three subtidal epibenthic molluscan communities in Hong Kong. In: Morton B, editor. Proceedings of an International Workshop Reunion Conference, Hong Kong: Perspectives on Marine Environment Change in Hong Kong and Southern China, 1977-2001. Hong Kong University Press, Hong Kong. pp 655-717
Liu, J.Y. [Ruiyu] (ed.). (2008). Checklist of marine biota of China seas. China Science Press. 1267 pp.
Huber, M. (2010). Compendium of bivalves. A full-color guide to 3,300 of the world's marine bivalves. A status on Bivalvia after 250 years of research. Hackenheim: ConchBooks. 901 pp., 1 CD-ROM