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IRGO - The International Research Group on Ostracoda
18th International Symposium on
Ostracoda (ISO-18) “Ostracoda - Evolving Witnesses of Changing
Environments”
THIRD CIRCULAR
University of California Santa Barbara
August 27-31, 2017 Twitter: @isostracoda18
Like us on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/isostracoda18/
(DRAFT version 8-26-2017)
The International Research Group on Ostracoda (IRGO) is pleased to welcome you to the 18th International Symposium on Ostracoda (ISO), in Santa Barbara at the University of California, Santa Barbara from August 27-31, 2017. For the first time in over 30 years, since 1982 in Houston, ISO will return to North America and the United States of America. Convenors: Todd Oakley (University of California, Santa Barbara), Gene Hunt (National Museum of Natural History) Organizing Committee: Todd Oakley (UCSB), Elisabeth Torres (California State University, Los Angeles), Ajna Rivera (University of the Pacific), Finn Viehberg (University of Cologne), Gene Hunt (NMNH), Welcome Committee: Emily Ellis (UCSB), Nicholai Hensley (UCSB), Suzie Heidner (SB), Tess Oakley (SB) Funding Committee: Lisa Park Boush (University of Connecticut) Scientific Committee: Simone N. Brandão (Brazil) Dermeval do Carmo (Brazil) Thomas M. Cronin (USA) David J. Horne (UK) Larry Knox (USA) Renate Matzke-Karasz (Germany) Koen Martens (Belgium) Ilaria Mazzini (Italy) Steffen Mischke (Iceland) Vincent Perrier (France) Benjamin Sames (Austria) Isa Schoen (Belgium) Alison Smith (USA) Robin Smith (Japan) Oive Tinn (Estonia) Don Van Nieuwenhuise (USA) Moriaki Yasuhara (Hong Kong) *IRGO Officers (2014-2017)* Chair: Finn Viehberg Vice-Chair: Todd Oakley Past Chair: Renate Matzke-Karasz Secretary: Ricardo Lourenco Pinto Communication Officer: Ilaria Mazzini Treasurer: Akira Tsukagoshi
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Locations and Abbreviations Manzanita Village - is the group of student apartments on the west side of campus overlooking the Pacific Ocean. Those who chose the campus housing will stay at Manzanita Village. Our ice breaker reception, symposium dinner, and poster session will be located in Manzanita village. De La Guerra Commons (DLG) - is the dining commons, where meals are included with the housing package for those staying at Manzanita Village. If you are staying off campus, you may buy individual meals at DLG, or have meals at the food court in the UCEN, or at restaurants in Isla Vista. For dinner, you could drive or take a bus to downtown Santa Barbara. Have you ever heard of the musician Jack Johnson? He was a UCSB student. His famous song Bubble Toes about a surfer girl says “I was eating lunch at the DLG”, where he met his surfer girl. If you visit our beaches, you might understand why the song says “her feet are infested with tar balls”. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qc4D42hn-Ww https://tinyurl.com/ya9uotzn Move like a jellyfish. Go with the flow. MCC (Multi-Cultural Center) Theater - is the site of all morning sessions and vendor displays. The theater is on the ground floor. Morning coffee breaks will be just outside between MCC and the University Center (UCEN), which has food, coffee, and a bookstore. Life Sciences Building (LSB) - is the site of all afternoon sessions. We will use the lecture hall, room 1001, which is also called the Rathman Auditorium. Coffee breaks will be just outside LSB in the afternoons. The African Taxonomic Harmonization Workshop is located in LSB as well. Hatlen Theater - is part of UCSB’s Theater and Dance Department. We will use the theater for screening the documentary Life That Glows, featuring cypridinid ostracods and other amazingly luminous creatures. The screening will be open to the public and have a Question and Answer session with an expert panel of scientists and filmmakers, featured in the documentary.
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ISO-18
Schedule At A Glance
Sunday
Monday
Tuesday W
ednesday Thursday
7:30 - 8:30 B
reakfast D
LG
7:30 - 8:30 Breakfast
DLG
7:30 - 8:30 B
reakfast D
LG
7:30 - 8:30 Breakfast
DLG
Pre-Symposium
Workshops
8:30 - 12:00 Registration O
pen M
CC
lobby
Saturday African Taxonomic
Harm
onization. LSB 1007 9:00 - 10:00 Introduction, W
elcome, M
addocks Keynote
MC
C
9:00 - 9:45 Introduction, W
elcome, M
orin Keynote
MC
C
9:00 Excursions Load B
usses outside DLG
9:00 - 10:30 Session 7 M
CC
Sunday N
EOTO
MA/D
IVA. NC
EAS 10:00 - 10:30 C
offee O
utside MC
C
9:45 - 10:15 Coffee
Outside M
CC
10:00-2:30 W
hale Watching
Santa Barbara Channel
Sack Lunch provided
10:30 - 11:00 Coffee
Outside M
CC
10:30-12:00 Session 1 M
CC
10:15-11:45 Session 4 M
CC
G
roup Photo TBA
10:00-2:30 Wine Tasting
Santa Ynez Valley Sack Lunch provided
11:00-12:30 Session 8 M
CC
12:00 - 1:00 Lunch D
LG
Noon - 1:00 Lunch
DLG
3:00 B
usses Return
Manzanita Village
12:30- 1:30 Lunch D
LG
1:00-6:00 Registration O
pen D
e Anza Courtyard
Manzanita Village
1:30-3:00 Session 2 LSB 1001
1:30-3:00 Session 5 LSB 1001
3:30-4:00 Poster Setup M
anzanita Village 2:00-3:45 Session 9 LSB 1001
3:00-3:30 C
offee O
utside LSB 3:00-3:30 C
offee O
utside LSB 4:00-5:30 Poster Session M
anzanita Village C
oncluding Rem
arks LSB
4:30-6:30 Ice-Breaker Social
De Anza C
ourtyard M
anzanita Village
3:30-5:00 Session 3 LSB 1001
3:30-5:30 Session 6 LSB 1001
4:00-4:45 Even numbered
posters present
5:00-6:30 IR
GO
Business
Meeting
LSB 1001
6:00-7:00 Dinner
DLG
4:45-5:30 O
dd numbered
posters present Post sym
posium field trip
Wrigley M
arine Lab, Catalina
Island
6:30-7:30 D
inner D
LG
8:00 - 10:00 Film Screening
Life That Glow
s H
atlen Theater
5:45-8:45 Symposium
Dinner
Las Encinas Quad Law
n M
anzanita Village
Pre-Congress Saturday August 26
7:00 am Those staying on campus can take continental breakfast, dropped in lobby of Miranda House, Manzanita Village UCSB
9:00 am - Open Ended African Ostracod Taxonomic Harmonization Workshop Location: Life Sciences Building (LSB) Room 1007 Local contact: Natasha Picciani (natasha.picciani@gmail.com) Organisers: Finn Viehberg and Koen Martens
Workshop is limited to participants who registered for the workshop. If interested to add, please contact Koen Martens or Finn Viehberg (finn.viehberg@uni-koeln.de). Registered participants as of Aug 7. 2017 include: Viehberg, Frenzel, Namiotko, Hong, Mazzini, Martens, Alivernini, Oneydineke, Matzke-Karasz, Park-Boush, Lord, Higuti, Chiu. 11:30 - 12:30 Lunch available in DLG Commons with conference housing 5:30 - 7:00 Dinner available in DLG Commons with conference housing
Pre-Congress Sunday August 27
7:00 am Those staying on campus can take continental breakfast, dropped in lobby of Miranda House, Manzanita Village UCSB
8:00 am Participants meet for shuttle to NCEAS 9:00 am - 4:00 pm NEOTOMA/DIVA-GIS Database and Software Workshop
Location: NCEAS. 735 State St #300, Santa Barbara Local contact: Louise Stevenson (louise.stevenson@lifesci.ucsb.edu)
Workshop is limited to participants who registered. Registered participants as of August 7, 2017 include: Gliozzi, Frenzel, Peng, Vyravsky, Spadi, Namiotko, Matzke-Karasz, Hong, Shin, Viehberg, Park-Boush, Chiu. Instructors include A. Smith, Horne, and Curry.
1:00 pm - 6:00 pm Registration for ISO-18
Location: De Anza Courtyard, Manzanita Village, UCSB campus 4:30 pm - 6:30 pm Ice-breaker social
Location: De Anza Courtyard, Manzanita Village, UCSB campus 11:30 - 12:30 Lunch available in DLG Commons with conference housing 5:30 - 7:00 Dinner available in DLG Commons with conference housing
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Plenary Sessions Begin. Monday August 28
7:30 am - 8:30 am Breakfast De La Guerra (DLG) Commons. Those staying at Manzanita Village have meal plan included at DLG.
8:30 am - 12:00 pm Continued Registration for ISO-18 Location: MCC THEATER Lobby. UCSB Campus. For late registration after this time, locate a UCSB volunteer.
9:00 am - 9:15 am Introduction, Welcome, and Keynote - MCC THEATER
- Prof. Scott Hodges. Welcome! Vice-Chair EEMB, UCSB. - PD Dr. Finn Viehberg. President of IRGO. - Todd Oakley, ISO-18 Organizer. Overview of Conference.
9:15 am - 10:00 am Keynote Lecture. Professor Rosalie Maddocks
Title: Flapper Valve and Hayfork: The Gastric Mill of Bairdioidea
10:00 am - 10:30 am Coffee Break 10:30 am - 12:00 pm Scientific Session 1 - MCC THEATER 12:00 pm - 1:00 pm Lunch
Location: Same as breakfast
1:30 pm - 3:00 pm Scientific Session 2 - LIFE SCIENCES BUILDING 1001 3:00 pm - 3:30 pm Coffee Break 3:30 pm - 5:00 pm Scientific Session 3 5:00 pm - 6:30 pm IRGO Business Meeting - LIFE SCIENCES BUILDING 1001 6:30 pm - 7:30 pm Dinner
Location: Same as breakfast. Must enter DLG by 7:00 for dinner.
8:00 pm - open SF*IRGO General Assembly - LSB 1001
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Tuesday August 29.
7:30 am - 8:30 am Breakfast De La Guerra (DLG) Commons. Those staying at Manzanita Village have meal plan included at DLG. Those staying elsewhere may purchase food at DLG, or at the food court at the UCEN, or walk to restaurants in Isla Vista. There are 2 cafeterias at UCSB as well, the Coral Tree Cafe and Nano Cafe. There is a coffee shop in the UCEN and coffee carts around campus.
9:00 am - 9:45 am Keynote Address. Professor James Morin. MCC THEATER
Luminaries of the reef: Courtship Displays by Luminescent Ostracods in the Caribbean
9:45 am - 10:15 am Coffee Break 10:15 am - 11:45 am Scientific Session 3 - MCC THEATER 11:45 am - 12:00 pm Conference Photo 12:00 pm - 1:00 pm Lunch
Location: Same as breakfast
1:30 pm - 3:30 pm Scientific Session 4 - LIFE SCIENCES BUILDING 1001 3:30 pm - 4:00 pm Coffee Break 4:00 pm - 5:30 pm Scientific Session 5- LIFE SCIENCES BUILDING 1001 6:00 pm - 7:00 pm Dinner
Location: Same as breakfast and lunch 8:00 pm - 10:00 pm Film Screening. BBC’s Life That Glows with panel discussion
Location: Hatlen Theater. UCSB Campus.
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Wednesday August 30.
7:30 am - 8:30 am Breakfast De La Guerra (DLG) Commons. Those staying at Manzanita Village have meal plan included at DLG. Those staying elsewhere may purchase food at DLG, or at the food court at the UCEN, or walk to restaurants in Isla Vista. There are 2 cafeterias at UCSB as well, the Coral Tree Cafe and Nano Cafe. There is a coffee shop (Starbucks) in the UCEN and coffee carts around campus.
9:00 am - 3:30 pm Mid-Symposium Excursions Location: Busses depart from DLG Commons Whale watching. Board busses for transport to boat. Wine tasting. Board busses for wine tasting tour.
4:00 pm - 5:30 pm Poster Session
Location: Manzanita Village. Set up after excursions. Even numbered posters present 4:00 - 4:45 Odd numbered posters present 4:45 - 5:30
5:45 pm - 8:45 pm Symposium Dinner
Location: MV Las Encinas Quad Lawn, Manzanita Village, UCSB
8
Thursday August 31.
7:30 am - 8:30 am Breakfast De La Guerra (DLG) Commons. Those staying at Manzanita Village have meal plan included at DLG. Those staying elsewhere may purchase food at DLG, or at the food court at the UCEN, or walk to restaurants in Isla Vista. There are 2 cafeterias at UCSB as well, the Coral Tree Cafe and Nano Cafe. There is a coffee shop in the UCEN and coffee carts around campus.
9:00 am - 10:30 am Scientific Session 6 - MCC THEATER 10:30 am - 11:00 am Coffee Break 11:00 am - 12:30 pm Scientific Session 7- MCC THEATER 12:30 pm- 1:30 pm Lunch
Location: Same as breakfast 2:00 pm - 3:45 pm Scientific Session 8- LIFE SCIENCES BUILDING 1001
Concluding Remarks
9
Sessions with Presenters and Titles
MONDAY August 28 Contributed 1 Paleoecology and diversity. 10:30-12:00
10:30-10:45 Yasuhara Cenozoic dynamics of shallow-marine biodiversity in the Western Pacific
10:45-11:00 Smith Paleobiogeography and paleoclimatic significance of Cytherissa lacustris (Ostracoda) in North
America
11:00-11:15 Viehberg Comparative salinity reconstructions in a non-marine environment: Revisited Laguna de Medina,
Cádiz, southern Spain
11:15-11:30 Mischke The ostracod record of Lake Balkhash (Kazakhstan) of the last 3000 years
11:30-11:45 Chiu Assessing Response of Large-scale Shallow Marine Biodiversity to Climate Change Using
Micropaleontological Records
11:45-12:00 Shin Cenozoic Indo-Pacific Marine Ostracode Biodiversity
Contributed 2 Brackish Ostracoda. 1:30-1:45
1:30-1:45 Pint Cyprideis torosa (Jones, 1850) as indicator of Early Holocene palaeoenvironmental changes in the
northwestern Saudi Arabia
1:45-2:00 Rossi Holocene ostracod and mollusc faunas from the Razelm lagoon (Danube Delta, Black Sea): a
multi-proxy paleoenvironmental record
2:00-2:15 Frenzel Brackish water Ostracoda of the South African coast and their potential as palaeoenvironmental
proxies
2:15-2:30 Roberts Reconstructing salinity in shallow coastal lakes and wetlands: a combined faunal and geochemical
approach
2:30-2:45 Yamada East Asian winter monsoon intensity in the last two millennia based on d18O in instar shells of
Bicornucythere bisanensis
2:45-3:00 Hong Freshwater reservoir construction by damming a marine inlet in Hong Kong: paleoecological
evidence of local community change
Contributed 3 Ecology and Biodiversity. 3:30-5:00
3:30-3:45 Külköylüoglu Do ostracods co-occur wherever and with whomever they prefer?
3:45-4:00 Yavuzatmaca Factor analyses on Ostracoda (Crustacea) species abundance and diversity at different elevational
ranges in Mersin, Turkey
4:00-4:15 Jöst Deep-sea ostracod diversity and faunal distribution in the sub-polar North Atlantic
4:15-4:30 Alkalaj Modern distribution of freshwater ostracods in Iceland
4:30-4:45 Výravský Ostracods in a heterogeneous spring fen: what drives the spatial and seasonal variation at fine
scale
4:45-5:00 Wrozyna Quantitative morphological variability of Neotropical Cytheridella
10
TUESDAY August 29 Contributed 4 Paleontology, Evolution, and Development. 10:15-11:45
10:15-10:30 Siveter A new exceptionally preserved myodocopid ostracod from the 430 million-year-old Silurian
Herefordshire Lagerstätte, UK
10:30-10:45 Perrier British Silurian Myodocope ostracods
10:45-11:00 Matzke-Karasz Ostracoda in Miocene Amber from Chiapas, Mexico
11:00-11:15 Lord Sieve type normal pore canals in Jurassic Ostracoda
11:15-11:30 Knox Heterochrony in a Pennsylvanian age hollinillid ostracode species
11:30-11:45 Hunt Sexual dimorphism in Late Cretaceous cytheroidean ostracodes from the US Coastal Plain
11:50 ALL CONFERENCE PHOTO NEAR STORKE TOWER
Contributed 5 Courtship, reproduction, and sexual selection. 1:30-3:30.
1:30-1:45 Reda A new bioluminescent ostracode genus (Myodocopida: Cypridinidae)
1:45-2:00 Rivers Helical swimming patterns of displaying luminescent ostracods in the field
2:00-2:15 Hensley Illuminating genotype - phenotype connections in the bioluminescent mating displays of sea
fireflies (Cypridinidae)
2:15-2:30 Gerrish Comparative trait differentiation in the bioluminescent courtship displays of ostracods in time and
space
2:30-2:45 Fernandes
Martins Testing sexual selection as a determinant of species extinction and origination in Late Cretaceous
cytheroid ostracodes
2:45-3:00 Kamiya Sperm metamorphosis and fertilization in cytheroidean ostracods: an example of Xestoleberis
hanaii
3:00-3:15 Smith Sexual reproduction and sperm variation in cypridoidean non-marine ostracods
3:15-3:30 Çelen First evidence of Cardinium bacteria in ostracods from Turkey
Contributed 6 Paleoenvironment. 4:00-5:30.
4:00-4:15 Y. Wang Ostracod assemblages and their paleoenvironmental significance in the Qaidam Basin since 1168 ka
4:15-4:30 Song Late Quaternary climatic record inferred from chemical composition of ostracod in Qaidam Basin
4:30-4:45 Alivernini Late Quaternary lake level changes of Tangra Yumco (Central Tibetan Plateau) and their
palaeoclimatic implications
4:45-5:00 Marchegiano The climate history of Lake Trasimeno (Italy) during Late glacial Holocene transition revealed from
ostracod assemblages
5:00-5:15 Tunoğlu The shallow marine ostracod fauna of the latest Cretaceous İncirli Formation (Alc. Basin, Central
Anatolia)
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THURSDAY August 31 Contributed 7 Paleoenvironment. 9:00-10:30.
9:00-9:15 Horne Calibration of non-marine ostracod species distributions for palaeoclimate applications: the
Ilyocypris bradyi/gibba problem
9:15-9:30 Mazzini The ostracoda from the Shungura Formation (Omo Valley, Ethiopia): a reassessment
9:30-9:45 Curry Full-glacial temperatures based on ostracode analogs (species and assemblages) from two North
American midwestern sites
9:45-10:00 Karpuk Paleodepth reconstruction of Late Barremian- Aptian of the Mountain Crimea using ostracodes
10:00-10:15 March Ostracod-based palaeoenvironmental reconstruction of a Middle Pleistocene lake at Marks Tey,
Essex, UK
10:15-10:30 Do Carmo The Gateway of Ostracoda from Brazil
Contributed 8 Neotropical Ostracoda/Biostratigraphy. 11:00-12:30.
11:00-11:15 Park-Boush Ostracode Distribution in Lakes in the Bahamas as a Response to Sea Level and Climate
Change
11:15-11:30 Martens High connectivity through long distance dispersal of (cryptic) non-marine ostracod species (Ostracoda, Crustacea) in four major Brazilian floodplains
11:30-11:45 Cabral Recent ostracod assemblages from the western Algarve continental margin, (Portugal)
11:45-12:00 Crasquin Hollinella (Palaeocopida) species - stratigraphic index - of the Late Permian . Early Triassic
post extinction
Contributed 9 Biostratigraphy. 2:00-3:30.
2:00-2:15 Bergue Taxonomy and climatic zonation of the late Quaternary bathyal ostracods from the Campos Basin,
Brazil
2:15-2:30 Qin Early Cretaceous non-marine ostracod biostratigraphy of the Dabeigou Formation of the Luanping
basin, Hebei, North China
2:30-2:45 Şafak Middle-Late Miocene ostracoda biostratigraphy and petrography of units located in
Silifke-Erdemli/Mersin (South Anatolia) areas
2:45-3:00 Warne Fossil ostracod proxies of paleoceanographic events in the Bass Strait seaway, southeast Australia
3:00-3:15 Spadi Taxonomic Harmonisation of Neogene and Quaternary Candoninae genera (Crustacea, Ostracoda)
of the Paratethys
3:15-3:30 H. Wang Ostracod biostratigraphy suggests no non-marine J/K boundary in the Dabeigou Formation or
Dadianzi Formation, Luanping Basin, China
3:30-3:45 Tuncer Preliminary results on the Holocene ostracod fauna of the Lake Mogan (Ankara, Central Anatolia)
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POSTER SESSION
N Presenter Title
1 Salvi Recent and Late Pleistocene ostracod assemblages from the western Magellan Strait
2 Fujihara Paleoenvironmental changes in Suwa Bay, Oki Islands, Japan, during the Holocene recorded by ostracod
assemblages.
3 Salvi Ostracods as a possible lecture key to explicate late Quaternary climatic events in the NW Ross Sea area
4 Peng Ostracod-inferred conductivity reconstruction and its palaeoclimatic implications in Lake Chen Co,
southern Tibetan Plateau
5 Irizuki Temporal changes of southwestern Japanese ostracode faunas with relation to the Miocene formation
and development of the Sea of Japan
6 Iwatani Intermediate-water dynamics of the Indonesian Throughflow during the last 15,000 years
7 Yamaguchi Late Paleocene-early Eocene seamount ostracodes at ODP Site 1209, Shatsky Rise, Pacific and their
response to hyperthermal event
8 Aguirre Applying micro computed tomography (CT) imaging to the description of new luminescent ostracod
species
9 Hiruta Phylogeography of Thalassocypridini ostracods around Japan
10 Ellis It’s Easy Being Green: A new species of philomedid ostracod, Euphilomedes crystalliviridis, with
investigation into its color
11 Külköylüoglu Neobicornucandona nov. gen. from the artesian Edwards Aquifer, Texas, U.S.A.
12 Külköylüoglu Non-marine ostracod species diversity of Texas, U.S.A.
13 Külköylüoglu Comalcandona gibsoni n. sp. from Comal Spring, Texas, U.S.A.
14 Külköylüoglu Description of Pseudostrandesia guleni n.sp. from Turkey
15 Namiotko Getting stuck in a sticky ground: molecular insights into the taxonomy of Candoninae (Ostracoda)
16 Camilleri Reclassification and clarification of the mid-Palaeozoic beyrichioid Ostracoda genera Bungonibeyrichia
and Velibeyrichia
17 Diaz A new species of Elpidium (Crustacea, Ostracoda) from phytotelmata in Argentina: description, habitat
and geography.
18 Antonietto Some comments on the systematics of Paleozoic-Early Mesozic Darwinulocopina Sohn, 1988
19 Knox High Resolution Computed Tomography Scanning of Ostracodes
13
20 Çelen No evidence of Wolbachia in non-marine ostracods from Turkey
21 Namiotko Testing toxicity of endocrine disrupters on development and reproduction of freshwater Ostracoda
22 Namiotko Hatching success of a non-marine ostracod Heterocypris incongruens exposed to intense electric and
magnetic fields (50 Hz)
23 Moreira Leite Ostracod taxonomy from Quirico Formation, Lower Cretaceous, São Francisco basin, Minas Gerais State,
Brazil
24 Шурупов
а
(Shurupova)
Phylogeny of the subgenus Palaeocytheridea (Palaeocytheridea) (Progonocytheracea, Pleurocytheridae)
from Middle Jurassic of Europe
25 Külköylüoglu On the tolerance and optimum values of non-marine Ostracoda
26 Külköylüoglu Light and Ostracods: color preferences and survival rates
27 Bunbury Freshwater ostracode response to anthropogenic disturbance inferred from a backwater lake of the
upper Mississippi River, U.S.A.
28 Fürstenberg Recent Brackish water Ostracoda from the western coast of South Africa
29 Cabral Composition and seasonal distribution of ostracods across the Sado estuary tidal marshes (SW Portugal)
30 Higuti Composition of recent non-marine Ostracoda (Crustacea) communities in four tropical floodplains (Brazil)
31 Higuti Do flood pulses control variability and persistence of Ostracoda (Crustacea) communities in tropical
floodplain lakes?
32 Higuti Factors determining the metacommunity structure of periphytic ostracods: a deconstruction approach
based on biological traits
33 Mette Environmental perturbations in the late Rhaetian of the Alps (Austria) recorded by carbon isotopes and
benthic microfossils
34 Yamaguchi CaCO3 standing stocks in deep-sea ostracode communities from shelf slopes of central Japan
35 Pint The environs of Elaia’s ancient harbour. Areconstruction based on microfaunal evidence
36 Surdel Hydroclimatic Significance of Limnocythere ceriotuberosa and Limnocythere bradbury in Quaternary
Western North America
37 Frenzel The microfauna of the Pleistocene Cyprina Clay in NE Germany
38 Tinn Do ostracods from the Kalana Lagerstätte (Silurian, Estonia) reveal their dietary preferences?
39 Forel Deep-sea Palaeozoic survivors in the Late Triassic
40 Zamudio LATE MIOCENE OSTRACODA FROM VALLE DEL CAJÓN, CATAMARCA PROVINCE, ARGENTINA.
41 Barbieri Ostracods as a proxy for Holocene delta dynamics: first results from the Po, Arno and Rhône river deltas
14
(Mediterranean Sea)
42 Mette Ostracod ecostratigraphy and extinction in the latest Permian of the Dolomites (Italy)
43 Antonietto The Last Dawn of the Reigning Darwinulids? Ostracoda from the Moenave Formation, Upper
Triassic?-Lower Jurassic, United States
44 Corwin A new species of bioluminescent, courtship signaling ostracod, Photeros GPH with experimental feeding
trials
45 Yamaguchi Assessment of calcification of marine ostracodes, using their valve weights
46 Korger Comparing population genetic structure of luminescent ostracods in sea grass vs. coral habitats
47 Torres Diversity of bioluminescent signaling ostracod crustaceans in Puerto Rico coral reef habitats
48 Torres A cryptic species complex of Skogsbergia (Myodocopida: Cypridinidae) in Caribbean coral reef habitats:
molecular phylogeny and morphological analyses
49 Torres Using morphology and molecules from a single specimen to diagnose ostracod species
50 Fallon The genomes of the bioluminescent ostracods Vargula tsujii and Photeros
51 Martens Cryptic diversity and speciation of endemic Cytherissa (Ostracoda, Crustacea) from Lake Baikal
52 Martens Metagenomics of the non-marine ostracod Darwinula stevensoni (Crustacea, Ostracoda)
53 Martens Unravelling the eco-evolutionary dynamics of two non-marine ostracod species (Crustacea) in response
to urbanization
54 Martens The application of ‘omics’ to Darwinula stevensoni (Crustacea, Ostracoda)
55 Conley Testing for multiple paternity in broods of Photeros annecohenae (Myodocopida: Cypridinidae)
56 Rivera Ostracod EvoDevo: Euphilomedes as a novel model
57 Colbourne Belts of Light: a new species of bioluminescent cypridinid ostracod from Belize
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