The color of commissures of fresh water mussels varies from yellow to shades of green.
mussels live in fresh water till they grow and you can eat them:)......
yes
Zebra Mussels...
Yes
I believe the fresh and salt water mussels are different species and will not survive in one another specialised environments.
no, their like every other mussel but they live in fresh water, they are related to clams.
Lucy Reardon has written: 'A contribution to our knowledge of the anatomy of the fresh-water mussels of the District of Columbia' -- subject(s): Freshwater mussels, Unionidae
Mussel is in fact a general name for many species of bivalve. These bivalves inhabit both fresh and saltwater, though not interchangeably. They do not need sunlight and their vitality can be assessed through observation; if they move, they're alive.
Fresh water clams live in fresh water and salt water clams live in salt water.There are both freshwater and saltwater clams. Mussels fall into this category as well. See the related links for both.
very clear
Freshwater pearls are a kind of pearl that comes from freshwater mussels. Real pearls come from shelled marine (salt water) mollusks, typically clams.
A freshwater snail is actually a type of freshwater mollusc (like clams and mussels that live in fresh water).