Great scallop

Pecten maximus
  • Where it lives:

  • Non native species

About

Great scallops are a large bivalve mollusc, its shell familiar to us all with its radiating ridges and characteristic scallop wings by the hinge. The 2 shells are actually different: one is curved like a bowl and the upper shell is flat like a lid. They live in a self-dug hollow on sandy or gravelly seabeds and are filter feeders, filtering out plankton and other micro-organisms. Scallops are a favourite food of starfish, but can actually swim out of harm's way by rapidly opening and shutting their shells, sending out jets of water which propel them over short distances.

How to identify

Also known as the 'King scallop' or 'Common scallop', Great scallops are distinguished from all other scallops by their large size and symmetrical 'wings'. They are normally a pale orange colour on the outside and have obvious radiating ridges.

Did you know?

Scallops have around 200 small eyes all around their mantle. These eyes have a beautiful blue sheen and allow the Scallops to detect approaching predators. Scientists have recently discovered that these eyes use mirrors to see - just like in telescopes. Scientists now plan to use this discovery to improve our telescope technology. Cool, hey?