Short description: Species of bivalve
| Paphies australis
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Scientific classification
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| Domain:
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Eukaryota
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| Kingdom:
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Animalia
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| Phylum:
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Mollusca
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| Class:
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Bivalvia
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| Order:
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Venerida
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| Superfamily:
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Mactroidea
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| Family:
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Mesodesmatidae
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| Genus:
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Paphies
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| Species:
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P. australis
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| Binomial name
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Paphies australis
Gmelin, 1790
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| Synonyms
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- Donacilla novaezeelandiae d'Orbigny, 1845
- Erycina ovata Gray, 1825
- Machaena ovata Gray, 1843
- Mactra ovata Wood, 1828
- Mesodesma aucklandicum E von Martens, 1879
- Mesodesma chemnitzii Deshayes, 1832
- Mesodesma ovalis Reeve, 1854
- Mya atlantica Spengler, 1793
- Mya australis Gmelin, 1791 (original combination)
- Paphies (Crassatella) roissyana Lesson, 1831
- Paphies roissyana Lesson, 1831
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Paphies australis or pipi (from the Māori language) is a bivalve mollusc of the family Mesodesmatidae, endemic to New Zealand. [1]
The pipi is a shellfish with a solid white, elongated symmetrical shell with the apex at the middle. It is covered by a thin yellow periostracum. Its closest relative, the tuatua (Paphies subtriangulata), has an asymmetrical shell, with an off-centre hinge.
The pipi is abundant on flat sandy beaches, in sandy and silty mud in estuaries, and harbours where there is considerable water flow.
By releasing a thread of mucus, which makes them more buoyant, they are able to float in the water column and move to new locations. Where they find good living conditions, their numbers can exceed more than 1000 individuals per square metre.[2]
Pipi as food
Pipi are edible and easily collected for food; traditional cooking methods include boiling and making into fritters. They are often used as the "clams" in clam chowder. The harvest limit in New Zealand is 50 per person per day, and although a minimum size is not stipulated in the regulations, only larger pipi should be taken. For Māori, pipi are a traditional food resource, and in earlier times were gathered in specific flax baskets made for this purpose. Smaller specimens would fall between the woven strips and back into the beds to grow as the basket was gently swirled through the water.
Maximum length is 83 millimetres (3.3 in), and height 51 millimetres (2.0 in).
References
- ↑ MolluscaBase eds. (2021). MolluscaBase. Paphies australis (Gmelin, 1791). Accessed through: World Register of Marine Species at: http://marinespecies.org/aphia.php?p=taxdetails&id=505806 on 2021-06-03
- ↑ "Cockles and Pipis, alive, alive-oh" (Press release). 4 January 2011. Retrieved 30 July 2011.
- Powell A. W. B., New Zealand Mollusca, William Collins Publishers Ltd, Auckland, New Zealand 1979 ISBN:0-00-216906-1
External links
- Paphies australis on New Zealand Mollusca
Commercial mollusks |
|---|
| Marine gastropods |
- Abalone
- Periwinkle
- Whelk
- Buccinum undatum
- Bullacta exarata
- Kelletia kelletii
- Kelletia lischkei
| |
|---|
| Land and freshwater gastropods |
- Helix pomatia
- Cornu aspersum
- Helix aperta
- Cepaea nemoralis
- Otala lactea
- Escargot
|
|---|
| Free-swimming marine bivalves |
- Scallop
- Queen scallop
- Pecten maximus
- Pecten jacobaeus
- Argopecten irradians
- Placopecten magellanicus
|
|---|
| Infaunal bivalves |
- Clam
- Atlantic surf clam
- Soft-shell clam
- Mercenaria mercenaria
- Austrovenus stutchburyi
- Saxidomus nuttalli
- Arctica islandica
- Cockle
- Geoduck
- Spisula solidissima
- Paphies ventricosa
- Paphies australis
- Tuatua
- Ruditapes largillierti
- Grooved carpet shell
|
|---|
| Sessile bivalves |
- Oyster
- Mussel
- Pearl oyster
- Pinctada maxima
|
|---|
| Freshwater bivalves | |
|---|
| Cephalopods | |
|---|
| Techniques |
- Heliciculture
- Gathering by hand
- Clam digging
- Dredging
- Oyster farming
- Oyster boats
- Pearl farming
- Pearl diving
- Ama divers
- Trawling
|
|---|
List of fishing topics by subject |
Edible mollusks |
|---|
| Bivalves | | Clams |
- Atlantic jackknife
- Atlantic surf
- Geoduck
- Grooved carpet shell
- Hard clam
- Horse
- Mactra stultorum
- Blunt gaper
- Ocean quahog
- Pacific razor
- Venus
- California butterclam
- Senilia senilis
- Smooth clam
- Soft-shell
- Triangle shell
- Tuatua
- Japanese littleneck
- Razor clam
- Pod razor
- Ensis (razor genus)
- Paphies
|
|---|
| Cockles |
- Common
- Blood
- Goolwa
- New Zealand
- Sydney
|
|---|
| Mussels |
- Blue
- Mediterranean
- New Zealand green-lipped
- California
- Brown
- Asian/Philippine green
- Date
- Mytilidae (mussel family)
|
|---|
| Oysters |
- Eastern
- Olympia
- Southern mud
- Colchester native
- Pacific
- Portuguese
- Windowpane
- Rock
- Sydney rock
- Ostra chilena/Bluff
- Gillardeau oysters
- Crassostrea ("true oyster" genus)
|
|---|
| Scallops |
- Atlantic bay
- Great/king
- New Zealand
- Pecten jacobaeus
- Peruvian calico
- Yesso
- Placopecten magellanicus
|
|---|
|
|---|
| Gastropods | | Abalone |
- White
- Red
- Black
- Green
- Pink
- Blacklip
- Greenlip
- Green ormer
- Paua (group of three species)
- South African abalone
- Chilean
|
|---|
| Conches | |
|---|
| Limpets |
- Black-foot opihi/Hawaiian
- Turtle/talc
- Yellow-foot opihi
- China
- Common European
- Rayed Mediterranean
- Ribbed Mediterranean
- Rustic
|
|---|
| Periwinkles |
- Common
- Banded
- Littorina sitkana
|
|---|
| Whelks |
- Common
- Kellet's
- Kelletia lischkei
- Knobbed
- Lightning
- Channeled
|
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| Other snails | | Sea |
- Mud-flat
- Korean mud
- Chorus giganteus
|
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| Land |
- Cornu aspersum
- Helix lucorum
- Helix pomatia
|
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| Freshwater | |
|---|
|
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|
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| Inkfish | | Cuttlefish | |
|---|
| Octopus |
- Common
- Atlantic white-spotted
- Big blue
- Pacific giant
- Southern red
- Mimic
- Amphioctopus fangsiao
|
|---|
| Squid |
- New Zealand arrow
- Japanese flying
- Humboldt
- Neon flying
|
|---|
|
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| Chitons |
- Chiton magnificus
- Acanthopleura echinata
- Acanthopleura granulata
|
|---|
| Related topics |
- Oyster farming
- Land snail farming
- Gastropod anatomy
- Bivalve anatomy
|
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Category |
Wikidata ☰ Q3013103 entry
 | Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paphies australis. Read more |