202 NEW- YORK FAUNA — MOLLUSCA. 



Anodon EXCURVATA. 



plate xvii. fig. 233. 

 (STATE COLLECTION.) 

 Description. Shell thin and fragile, transversely oblong, inflated, cylindrical. Beaks slightly 

 before the anterior third of the shell, prominent, decorticated (in young shells with two or 

 three distant undulations), the greatest thickness at the middle of the shell. Hinge-margin 

 short, straight, forming a descending slope posteriorly, broadly emarginate beyond ; this is 

 more obvious in the younger shells, in which the hinge-slope is more elevated : the ridge 

 from the beaks distinct and rounded, including two concentric elevations on each side ; the 

 posterior end produced, obtusely pointed, upturned : basal margin, in adults, slightly con- 

 tracted in the middle. Surface deeply corrugated by the lines of growth, and these corruga- 

 tions are distinctly marked within. 



Color. Epidermis varying from light grass-green in the young, to deeper green and oliva- 

 ceous in the adult, with narrow obscure greenish radiations, often minutely wrinkled : interior 

 bluish iridescent, with a faint tinge in some of salmon towards the cavity of the beaks. In 

 adults, the interior is strongly impressed by some of the stages of growth. 

 Vertical axis, 2.7 ; transverse ditto, 5*5. Diameter, 2' 1. 



This superb Anodon was found by Dr. W. Newcomb in Shaker pond, Niskayuna, Albany 

 county, and by Mr. Cozzens in the Passaic river in the neighborhood of this city. Its size, 

 almost cylindrical shape, with its peculiar upturned posterior extremity, could not be recon- 

 ciled to any of the descriptions accessible to me. It seems most allied to the implicata of 

 Say, but the description and figure do not apply to this. The young are not so much inflated. 

 In one whose transverse axis was 2-4, the vertical axis was 1-2, and the diameter only 0-8. 

 In the collection of Dr. Budd, are specimens from Lake Champlain, which I refer to this 

 species ; in the greater part of these, the beaks and the ridge to the posterior margin of the 

 shell are of an orange, or rather of a mahogany color, which is more or less difi'used over 

 the shell. 



Anodon implicata. 



Anodonta implicata. Say, Des. Icrr. & fluv. Shells, p. 11. RnssEL, Essex Jour. Vol. 1, p. 60. 

 A. newtoniensis. Lea, Trans. Am. Phil. Soc. Vol. 6, p. 79, pi. 21, fig. 66, fide Gould. 

 A. marginata (young). Say, Nich. Ency. Vol. 4, pi. 3, fig. 5. 

 A. implicata. GouLn, Invertebrata of Mass. p. 118, fig. 78. 



Description. Shell thick, strong and heavy, subcylindrical, suboval. Beaks somewhat 

 elevated at the anterior two-fifths ; breadth greatest behind the middle : ridge from the beaks 

 to tlie posterior margin very distinct and prominent ; the margin itself bluntly rounded, not 

 upturned : in the space above this, are three or four coarse concentric lines ; basal margin 

 deeply arched, and contracted in large specimens. Surface roughened by the irregidar stages 

 of growth. 



