That would be awesome I’d like to know what it is, I definitely didn’t add anything like that so it must’ve been in my tank and growing for quite a while to even be the size that it is now
Able to get to my computer today (sadly realized one of my two primary resources for bivalve family ID has shut down, so I'll have to see if I can access it another way).
Anyway, looking at the shell shape, it's definitely from the Mytilidae family;* from there, there are a few species in a few of the subfamilies that can resemble this, but I have to agree that between the shape and the radial ribbing, the Brachidontinae subfamily is the most likely by far; so that leaves us with essentially three genera to work with: Brachidontes, Geukensia, and Ischadium (as Mytilaster is usually quite different superficially, typically lacking visible radial ribbing).
The way to officially tell them apart is using the hinge line (the part of the hinge where the external part of the shell turns meets the internal part of the shell; basically the lip on the internal/inward-side separating external and internal) and hinge teeth (see the first pic - not the banner pic - in the second link** below; essentially smooth hinge line + no teeth = Geukensia, smooth hinge line + 3-4 small teeth that don't touch the hinge line = Ischadium, and a typically bumpy hinge line + 1-4 teeth that touch the hinge line = Brachidontes); however,
Ischadium recurvum, the one species in the Ischadium genus, generally is darker in color, "squatter"/rounder, and with a much stronger "hook" to its umbone (the "point" of the shell), so I would feel confident in assuming it's not that one.
Between Brachidontes and Geukensia; several Brachidontes species are generally much "squatter" or less elongated, but several can resemble this as well (unfortunately, I am not currently familiar with all of the 28 recognized species of this genus at the moment, so I can't narrow it down effectively yet, particularly without knowing where it's from - I can only eliminate roughly half of the species as strong possibilities and note that a few are superficially strong possibilities); with your specimens and regards to the Geukensia genus, I don't believe I can see any "beading" on the ribbing, the ribbing appears relatively few and large, and the edge of your specimen appears quite flat (not noticeably curved), so I would assume that - if your specimen is a Geukensia species - it's
G. demissa, not
G. granosissima.***
So, if you can view the hinge line without harming your specimen, that would tell you what genus it's in, and from there you can determine for sure if it's
G. demissa or a
Brachidontes sp. that would require further investigation to fully ID with confidence.
*Source:
**Source:
olram9.wixsite.com
***Source (differentiating info is partway down, roughly in the middle of the pics):
olram9.wixsite.com