The adaptations of mussels are quite extensive. Mussels attached to ships and migrated to waters that required them to be able to eat new food sources.
Green-lipped mussels have adapted by developing specialized shells that help them withstand wave action and protect them from predators. They also have a unique ability to filter feed, obtaining nutrients from the surrounding water. Additionally, they have a symbiotic relationship with certain types of algae that provide them with additional nutrients.
They have special ugly adaptions
Mussels are shellfish, not rabbits. I would suggest not feeding mussels leaves.
Zebra mussels have stripes.
Freshwater mussels live in rivers, while saltwater mussels live in oceans. Even though it is mussels, it differs a lot. Freshwater mussel and saltwater mussels hunt different things, because they live in different places.
The collective noun is a bed of mussels.
Bears can inhale freshwater mussels when they want.
G. Thomas Watters has written: 'A guide to the freshwater mussels of Ohio' -- subject(s): Freshwater mussels, Identification, Mussels 'The freshwater mussels of Ohio' -- subject(s): Identification, Margaritiferidae, Freshwater mussels, Unionidae
No, mussels have no brain, as with all bivalves.
Sometimes the mussels predetor could make the mussel species drop down
"les moules " is mussels and "les frites" is chips
Zebra mussels belong to the family Dreissenidae. These are freshwater bivalve mollusks. Despite their name, zebra mussels are not true mussels.