Jingle Shell (Anomia simplex)

Jingle Shell (Anomia simplex)

Clams, quahogs, oysters and mussels are probably the most well known bivalves, mollusks with two hinged shells, but there are many others. Another example is the jingle shell (Anomia simplex). Interestingly, despite having two hinged shells, it is often only the top shell that is found washed up on the beach. The bottom shell is less frequently discovered because it often remains attached to whatever substrate the animal was growing on. 

The upper shell is convex and is movable during filter feeding. The bottom shell, on the other hand, becomes fixed in place onto whatever the organism attaches and takes on the shape of whatever it’s growing on. If you were to find one of the bottom shells, however, you would notice that it tends to be smaller and flatter than the top shell, and has a hole near the hinge. It is through this hole that the animal passes its byssus, threadlike attachments that allow the jingle shell to cling securely to rocks and other hard surfaces. 

The upper (left) and lower (right) shells of a jingle shell. Note the opening/hole in the lower valve.

Contrasting with the thick, solidness of quahog shells, jingle shells are thin and translucent. Despite this, these shells are very strong and are capable of withstanding many environmental pressures. Jingle shells can also range in color from almost white to yellow to orange to a silvery black. 

Jingle shells are mainly found along the Atlantic coast of the United States from the Caribbean to Cape Cod, but have been found as far north as Nova Scotia. The origin of the nickname “jingle shell” refers to the sound a collection of these shells makes when carried in a container and mixed around, producing a “jingle.” This jingle sound can also be heard when waves wash over beaches strewn with these shells. Another common name for jingle shells is “Mermaid’s Toenails.” Despite the superficial resemblance that some of these shells have to large toenails, I’ve always been amused by this name since mermaids have fins instead of legs, feet and toes, and therefore have no toenails. 

This jingle shell actually washed up onto the beach still attached to the small rock it was attached to, with both valves (upper and lower shell) still connected.

2 thoughts on “Jingle Shell (Anomia simplex)

  1. So what sort of animal lives in these shells? Maybe I missed that info as I was reading. Good one about the mermaid toenails, by the way. Maybe whoever came up with that thought that mermaids started out as land females, transformed, sprouted fins, and left the no longer necessary toenails in the water?

    1. The animal inside is a bivalve mollusk – soft squishy body inside two shells – a lot like a clam or a mussel.

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