Apr 1, 2009 - eResources    No Comments

Where can I find out more information on famous people?


The online database World Who’s Who is a good starting point.  It is an online database where you can search for information on famous and maybe not so famous personalities in the world.  Try it and see whether a person is famous enough to be found here.

Click below on how to navigate the World Who’s Who database:

World Who’s Who – a guide

Please feel free to download it, but do note that the materials and their copyrights belong to NLB, and the downloads are for personal use only. Drop us an email at ask@nlb.gov.sg for further enquiries on the Guide.

Please also visit NLB eResources webpage to access other eDatabases as well as eBooks, eJournals, eNewspapers and eMagazines.

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Posted by
Mr Kweh Soon Huat
Librarian,  Adults and Young People’s Services

Kids ASK! What do oysters and clams eat and how do they reproduce?

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(picture taken from http://onfinite.com)

Besides being seen as ingredients for a delectable dish, oysters and clams are also a type of mollusk (animals that have a soft body in a shell) belonging to the bivalves family. Animals from the bivalves family have two shells held together by hinges.

Oysters and clams do not have mouths or teeth like other animals so they eat microscopic organisms called plankton (the same type of food eaten by whales!), which they strain from the water with their gills.

What is  interesting is that oysters and clams do not have a specific gender, they can be both female and male! They change their gender regularly, producing eggs and sperm at different times. 

Thus, the male oysters and clams will release sperm into the water and the female oysters and clams will take the sperm in as they filter the water for food with their gills. The eggs are fertilized in the shells of the female oysters and clams.

After fertilization, the young oysters and clams are born as larvae and in their final larvae stage, oysters and clams develop a muscular foot that they use to crawl about.

However, oysters lose this foot when they find a permanent habitat but clams move about with their foot throughout their lives.

Want to find out more about oysters and clams? Read these books to learn more!

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1) Sea Life by Katy Pike, Garda Turner and Maureen O’Keef
  Call Number: J English 578.77 PIK

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2) Oyster by Rebecca Stott
  Call Number: English 594.4 STO

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3) Snails, Shellfish And Other Mollusks by Daniel Gilpin
  Call Number: J English 594 GIL

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Originally answered by Ms Chew Siew San
Children’s Librarian
Children’s Services