Sometimes the giant clams are still treated as a separate family Tridacnidae,[1] but modern phylogenetic analyses included them in the family Cardiidae as a subfamily.[2][3]
Two recent genera and eight species are known:
In some areas, such as the Philippines, smaller members of the subfamily are farmed to supply the marine aquarium trade and food trade towards east Asia. All species in the Tridacninae family are protected under CITES Appendix II meaning international trade requires CITES permits to be granted.[5]
Tridacinae originated in Western Europe during the Eocene, expanding eastwards towards Arabia by the Oligocene, and becoming established in its modern distribution in the Indo-Pacific during the Pliocene-Pleistocene.[6]
^Schneider,J. Phylogeny of cardiid bivalves (cockles and giant clams): revision of the Cardiinae and the importance of fossils in explaining disjunct biogeographical distributions. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2002,136, 321–369
^Keys,J.L., Helay,J.M. Relevance of Sperm Ultrastructure to the Classification of Giant Clams (Mollusca, Cardioidea, Cardiidae, Tridacnidae)(in: Harper et al., (Eds) The Evolutionary Biology of the Bivalvia, Geological Society Special Publication No 177, 2000)
^Schneider, J.A.,and O´Foighil, D. Phylogeny of Giant Clams (Cardiidae: Tridacnidae) Based on Partial Mitochondrial 16S rDNA Gene Sequences. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution Vol. 13, No. 1, October, pp. 59–66, 1999