Few shell-crushing predators can excavate prey living deep within the sediment. Despite this infaunal refuge from predators, many deep-burrowing bivalves display a strikingly high incidence of shell ...
Bivalves have pursued an infaunal lifestyle since early in their history. Trace fossils that have been attributed to the infaunal activity of bivalves include Hillichnus, Lockeia (=Pelecypodichnus), ...
DURING recent investigations of burrowing in worms and bivalve molluscs 1–3 new techniques have been developed of continuously recording activity, because conventional methods which involved the ...
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