The influence of potential sources of variations (age, site, region) on the production of shell microgrowth increments was studied in the cockle Cerastoderma edule (L.) from the shores of Denmark, Jersey Island and South Wales between 1978 and 1986. Microgrowth increments in the shell of the cockle were counted between annual growth marks corresponding to the second, third, and fourth yearly growth period of the cockle. The number of microgrowth increments per year showed a decrease with increasing age. Increments formed after deposition of the last annual mark in cockles sampled at different dates indicate that the rate of increment formation differed between age classes and populations. Furthermore, we observed pronounced intrapopulation differences in the number of increments for specimens of the same age, and differences in both number and clarity of increments in subtidal and intertidal populations. Our results do not support the hypothesis of a general endogenous rhythm of microgrowth that closely corresponds to tidal rhythms in Cerastoderma edule. Instead, they emphasize the plasticity of deposition according to the origin and age of the experimental specimens. © 1990 Springer-Verlag.