Fossils of
Laternula elliptica dating back to the late
Pliocene are common in certain sedimentary rocks on
Cockburn Island and the
James Ross Island group off the
Antarctic Peninsula. Some of these fossils are still in the positions the molluscs occupied when alive and it has been found that they are all orientated in roughly the same direction, many with a variance of only 10° and all within a 66° range. This orientation is similar to the way in which the
soft-shell clam (
Mya arenaria) places itself at right angle to the main water movements it experiences, a positioning that is believed to optimise water flow through the siphons. Another bivalve, the
freshwater pearl mussel (
Margaritifera margaritifera), is not exposed to the ebb and flow of the tide and locates itself so that the inhalant siphon is upstream of the exhalant siphon. This
rheotaxis may help
Laternula elliptica maximise energy gain in the summer in an environment where the food availability and consequent growth of organisms varies greatly at different times of the year. The orientation of modern
Laternula elliptica has not yet been studied. ==References==