86 PHOLAS. 



very small teeth, and an aperture which extends two- 

 thirds the length of the shell. It inhabits the American 

 islands, and burrows in calcareous rocks and corals. 



TEREDO PIERCER. 



12. Pholas Teredula. Ph. testa oblonga, alba; sutura granulata,fusca, 



longitudinali. Linn. Gmel. 3217. 

 Shell oblong and white, with a longitudinal brown granulated suture. 

 Pall. Nov. Act. Petrop. 2. p. 240. t. 6. f. 26. A. D. 



This shell, according to Pallas, inhabits the Belgic 

 shores, and penetrates timber. It is more like a por- 

 tion of a Teredo than a Pholas. 



Gmelin's Ph. Campechensis, p. 3215. n. 8. is too ob- 

 scure to be admitted as a species. He refers to Lister, 

 t. 432. for his authority, but the figure is not sufficiently 

 distinct from Ph. Candida, to be considered as specific, 



