The Atlantic paper mussel is attached to the seabed and other nearby mussels by means of
byssus threads secreted by a gland in the foot. In some areas it is very common and in the
Nassau River estuary in
Florida in 1993 was recorded at a density of 3325 per square metre (309 per sq ft). Breeding takes place between October and January. The sexes are separate in this mussel, and gametes are liberated into the sea, where fertilisation takes place. The larvae develop rapidly and at the
veliger stage are distinguishable from other
mytilid larvae by the small number of teeth on the hinge of their developing shell. ==References==