ACTIVITIES

 

ARGENTINA

Correspondent: Alwine Bertels

Sara C. Ballent Papers in press: (1) Ballent, S.C. and Whatley, R.C., Ostracodos del Albiano de la perforacion S.C.-1 (Santa Cruz-1), Provincia de Santa Cruz, Argentina: Ameghiana (Palaeontological Note); (2) Whatley, R.C. and Ballent, S.C., A review of the genus Progonocythere Sylvester-Bradley and its close allies: Palaeontology; (3) Ballent, S.C. and Ronchi, D.Y., El genero Majungaella Grekoff (Ostracoda) en el Cretacico de Argentina: Communication).

Bertels, Alwine continues directing several doctoral theses: (1) Laura Ferrero, Micropaleontologia y paleoecologia (ostracodos y foraminiferos) del Cuaternario del sudeste de la provincia de Buenos Aires; (2) Cecilia Laprida, Micropaleontologia (Foraminiferos y Ostracodos) del Holoceno del nordeste de la provincia de Buenos Aires; consideraciones paleoambientales; (3) Dina E. Martinez, Ostracodos marinos y no marinos del Cuaternario del Sur de la provincia de Buenos Aires, consideraciones paleoambientales. In these theses, the research compresses the study of fossil Foraminifera and marine and nonmarine Ostracoda, the last being compared with some recent taxa collected in the regions.

Current work includes: (1) Bertels, A. and Cusminsky, G.C., Micropaleontologia del Grupo Nahuel Huapi, area de San Carlos de Bariloche; (2) Bertels, A. and Martinez, D.E., Ostracodos no marinos del Holoceno del arroyo Naposta Grande.

Papers in press: (1) Bertels, A. and Martinez, D.E., Ostracodos holocenos de la desembocadura del arroyo Naposta Grande, sur de la provincia de Buenos Aires, Argentina: Rev. Espana. Micropaleont.; (2) Bertels-Psotka, A. and Laprida, C., Ostracodos (Arthropoda, Crustacea) del Miembro Cerro de la Gloria, Formacion las Escobas (Holoceno), provincia de Buenos Aires, Republica Argentina: Rev. Espana. Micropalaeont.; (3) Bertels-Pstoka, A. and Laprida, C., Ostracoda (Arthropoda, Crustacea) holocenos del Miembro Canal 18 (Formacion Las Escobas), provincia de Buenos Aires, Republica Argentina: Rev. Espana. Micropaleont.; (4) Bertels-Psotka, A. and laprida, C., Ostracodos (Arthropoda, Crustacea) de la Formacion las Escobas (Holoceno), Cuenca del Salado, provincia de Buenos Aires, Republica Argentina: Ameghiniana.

Gabriela C. Cusminsky Current work, besides the study of non-marine Ostracoda of the San Carlos de Bariloche area, includes the research of Ostracoda from western Argentina lakes and the non-marine Holcoene Ostracoda from north Patagonia.

Alicia E. Echevarria Current work: (1) marine Ostracoda of the Centinela Formation (Oligocene) of Santa Cruz Province, Argentina.

Papers in press: (1) Echevarria, A.E., Ostracodos marinos del Paleogeno del sud-sudeste del Lago Cardiel, Santa Cruz, Argentina: Simposio del Paleogeno de America del Sur, Actas; (2) Ostracodos de la Formacion Centinela (Oligoceno), del sudeste del lago Cardiel, Santa Cruz, Argentina: inferencias paleoambientales: Simposio del Paleogeno del America del Sur, Actas.

Laura Ferrero Work in progress: Palaeoenvironmental evolution during the last 20,000 years in the Quequen Grande river basin based on the sedimentology and the relationships of ostracods and diatomites.

 

AUSTRALIA

Correspondent: Stephen Eagar

Michael Ayress is continuing work mainly on Poseidonamicus and Krithe off Australia and New Zealand. It is anticipated that other projects will also be completed this year. These include: (1) Recent ostracods and water mass structure off Kerguelen; (2) the use of ostracods in recognizing downslope transport off SE Australia; (3) ostracod distribution and ecology in Prydz Bay, Antarctica. Collaboration with New Zealand researchers Kerry Swanson (Christchurch Univ.), Helen Neil (NIWA) and Penny Cooke (Waikato Univ.) Also continues this year. This work includes a study of Cytheropteron testudo and allied species, ostracods from the Chatham Rise, and high resolution Plio-Miocene faunal changes at ODP site 593, respectively.

Papers in press: (1) Ayress, M.A., Neil, H., Passlow, V., and Swanson, K., Benthonic ostracods and deep water masses; a qualitative comparison of SW Pacific, Southern and Atlantic Oceans: Proc. Palaeoceanographic Conference (November 1994, Canberra, Australia), Palaeogeogr., Palaeoclim., Palaeoecol; (2) Rathburn, A.E., Pichon, J.-J.., Ayress, M.A., and DeDeckker, P., Microfossil and stable-isotope evidence for changes in Late Holocene paleoproductivity and paleoceanographic conditions in the Prydz Bay region of Antarctica: Proc. Palaeoceanographic Conference (November 1994, Canberra, Australia), Palaeogeogr., Palaeoclimat., Palaeoecol.

Patrick DeDeckker The study of the Quaternary evolution of the eastern Indian Ocean continued from 1995 with a second cruise on board the Australian National Facility RV Franklin in February-March. Several researchers and students from the Geology Department participated in this very successful cruise that helped bring back numerous water and plankton samples, and many deep-sea cores. Dr. C. Hass from University College London/GEOMAR Kiel, and Mr. K. Takahashi from Hokkaido University also participated on the cruise as part of an international collaboration engendered by P. De Deckker. Many of the cores have already been processed by Dr. Martinez, Mrs. J. Shelley, and Dr. T. Munson in collaboration with P. De Deckker and numerous stable isotope analyses have been conducted on foraminifers extracted from key cores. Faunal analyzes have been performed by Dr. Martinez on several cores also. Material has been given to Hokkaido University for analysis of nannoplankton during P. De Deckker’s visit there in July. A student from that institution will come to ANU to collaborate on the investigations of the cores taken during the Franklin cruises. Ostracods will be extracted from selected cores and the taxa will help identify changes in bottom water conditions through time in the eastern Indian Ocean, and in particular for the last 30,000 years. The use of ostracods will also be applied to determine the presence/absence of reworked ‘elements’, so often ignored by geochemists who work on deep-sea cores.

Lynda Taylor is in the final stages of her Ph.D. and is now able to define the interactions through time between surface and ground water systems in western Victoria near Horsham. She is able to convincingly demonstrate the use of ostracods to define (modern and past) chemical pathways of the lake systems in which ostracods live(d). For Patrick, collaboration with Dr. G. Wansard from the University of Louvain in Belgium on ostracod shell chemistry is near completion.

Ken McKenzie has had so far and expects a somewhat hectic year in 1997. It began with a trip to India, which was meant to be a nostalgic return to places where he grew up, but included a seminar and an afternoon’s regard of Indian freshwater ostracodes from the Deccan hilly country lakes.

The Parma group’s joint paper for the Bierville-Paris 3rd European Ostracodologists’s Meeting was well liked by the referees and will appear in the Proceedings volume. Another offering was presented at a 1996 Naples conference. The book on South Atlantic taxa will appear this year, published by Springer Verlag. In the Mediterranean/Tyrrhenian Sea, the Parma team has doubled the known planktonic ostracode faunule and Ken expects that several more species will be added from recently collected Ligurian offshore material.

The Shallow Tethys conference series continues, with the next meeting in Chiang Mai, Thailand, in February, 1999. Ken remains the ST Newsletter editor.

Finally, there will be more work at Parma during May-July; and, during March, Ken will give a talk on Shallow Tethys at Adana University, Turkey. He is on the Organizing Committee for the 4th EO Meeting at Adana in May, 1999.

John Neil continues research on the faunas of southeastern Australia, with current emphasis on intra- and interspecific variation. My position as Honorary Visiting Research Fellow at La Trobe University, Bendigo, has been extended for another year.

Current work in progress--two papers on intraspecific variation in southeastern Australian Tertiary faunas, one for the 13th ISO in July at Greenwich (in absentia) and one for the AAP conference at Wollongong in December this year. A taxonomic paper on further genera from the Muddy Creek Marl of southwestern Australia from my thesis work.

Papers in press: Neil, J., A Late Palaeocene ostracode fauna from the Pebble Point Formation, southwestern Victoria.

Andrew Parker In January, 1997 I began a three-year grant on the systematics and biogeography of scavenging myodocopids from the east Australian coast (Cairns to Hobart); there are about 88 new species, including 4 new genera. The ecological results suggest that myodocopids are the most abundant macro-invertebrates on the east Australian shelf; before this study, only a few species and no abundance data were known! I am completing work with Akira Tsukagoshi on segmentation in Ostracoda. Akira will be presenting our paper on podocopids at the Greenwich conference this year. I have in press papers on mating and feeding in myodocopids, which include some new anatomical nomenclature and discoveries. I have submitted papers on new sensory structures in myodocopids; one new type of sensilla probably detects vibrations (sound?) and is very unusual in ultrastructure. I am continuing my work on iridescence, now moving on to halocyprids after working with Martin Angel. I have also studied structural colors in other animals for comparisons, and recently presented a summary as "The Australian Institute of Physics lecture". Following the discovery of diffraction gratings similar to those on ostracods in Burgess Shale fossils, I am writing a book called "The Cambrian Light Switch". Last year I spent time working in Poland (University of Lodz and National Academy of Sciences, Warsaw) and England (Cambridge University).

Mark Warne has continued his work on Bass Strait Tertiary faunas, Otway Basin Cretaceous faunas and Lachlan Fold Belt Devonian faunas. He also has continued a major development program of educational multimedia for geology courses at La Trobe University. Al-Amin Idris (M.S. candidate) continues with his studies on the Tertiary ostracod faunas of the Gippsland Basin, Victoria, Australia. Michelle Guzel (Ph.D. candidate) continues with her ostracod studies as part of her work on the Cretaceous micropalaeontology and stratigraphy of the Carnarvon Basin, western Australia.

Iradji Yassini As my professional activities mainly relate to local environmental issues, in 1996 I spent little time on ostracods or forams. This year I will be continuing to work on Lord Howe Island ostracods and forams. In 1996 I resampled the intertidal zone around the island. Hopefully, by the end of 1997 the manuscript should be ready.

 

AUSTRIA

Correspondent: Dan L. Danielopol

Dan L. Danielopol worked on ostracods within a new project of ground ecology (Do widely distributed groundwater dwelling crustacean species behave ecologically alike? The adaptation of interstitial Cyclopoida and Ostracoda to contrasting habitats of an alluvial aquifer of the Danube.) With Pierre Marmonier, various populations of Cryptocandona kieferi were analyzed and the comparative morphology studied. Within this project work, also Frederike Mosslacher and Peter Pospisil (see below). During the summer, Dan worked in Bordeaux with Pierre Carbonel and Jean Paul Colin on the Timiriaseviinae (cladistics and biogeography) and the data were discussed during a workshop in Bierville; the other members of the Timiriaseviinae working group (Dave Horne, Koen Martens) as well as various colleagues attending the European Meeting on Ostracoda also participated. With Angel Baltanas and Bill Humphreys, a study on Thaumatocyprididae, with the description of a new species, was completed and presented as communication in Bierville. With Koen Martens, he sampled darvinulids in southern France and investigated a fascinating subsurface habitat reach in ostracods (details will be presented in a special publication). Teaching and administrative activities filled the rest of the time during the past year.

Walter Geiger spent only a short period of time in Mondsee. He worked mainly on his project " Clonal ecology of Limnocythere inopinata", cooperating in Mondsee with Yu Yin, F. Mosslacher, and G.M. Paris (a guest visitor from Univ. of Parma, working on food ingestion and metabolic efficiency of L. inopinata). The other part of the year was spent by Walter in Madrid in the Department of Ecology, UAM, working with A. Baltanas and N. Johnson. Results of his research were presented in Bierville and Parma.

Heinz Loffler is continuing to work on ostracods after his official retirement on the Limnological Department at the University of Vienna. During 1996 he investigated Quaternary ostracods from Kremstal, Upper Austria, within a project of the Geological Survey (Vienna). Heinz continues to teach various aquatic ecology topics, eg., paleolimnology.

Friederike Mosslacher investigated the respiratory capacity and oxygen consumption of Limnocythere inopinata within the W. Geiger project. She is also looking at the adaptive capabilities of subsurface dwelling Candoninae under various environmental conditions. She tries to see if one can use interstitial dwellling ostracods for ecotoxicology and further for environmental biomonitoring. She was also involved in a cooperative work (with Dave Horne) on the brooding behavior of Darwinula stevensoni. Data were presented in Bierville.

Irene Zorn has finished her study on the Karpatian ostracodes from the Korneuburg Basin. The paper will be published in the "Beitrage zur Palaontologie" in Vienna. A description of the species and a paleoecological and biostratigraphical interpretation is given. In the scope of the geological mapping program and other projects of the Geological Survey in Austria, she worked on Miocene ostracodes from Molasse Zone and the Vienna Basin. Mrs. Zorn could locate parts of the ostracodes and foraminifers from Seelowitz (=Zidlochovice, Moravia) which were published by Prochazka, 1893, in the collection of the Geological Survey of Austria. Type specimens of four of Prochazka’s new species could be identified. A short paper on this subject is in preparation.

Yu Yin worked experimentally on various populations and clones of Limnocythere inopinata, describing their life history characteristics. Preliminary data were presented in Bierville and Parma and a fully detailed account can be found in a doctoral thesis, which will completed during the first part of 1997 and/or in several publications coauthored with W. Geiger.

 

BELARUS

S.F. Zubovicz The Scientific students laboratory of the Faculty of Natural Sciences at the Belarusian State University of Education is the only establishment in our Republic which carries on ostracodologic research. On the whole, the ostracodes of the Cenozoic times are studied here. In 1996 the research finished scientific work on the methods to identify the monitoring for discovering changes in the quality of water based on ostracodologic research. The sediments of different interglacials to the Pleistocene time have been studied lately. The following new species of ostracodes from the lake sediments of the Shclov interglacial were published in 1007: Cypridopsis roslavliensis Zubowicz sp. nov., Cypria trapeciaformica Zubowicz sp. nov., Candona subovala Zubowicz sp. nov., Candona dementevi Zubowicz sp. nov., Candona woroshilovae Zubowicz sp. nov., Cytherissa sklovica Zubowicz sp. nov.

 

BELGIUM

Correspondent: Karel Wouters

Jean-Georges Casier is continuing research on Devonian ostracods from the world, particularly in relation with the Late Devonian Mass Extinction. He is currently working on ostracods from the Eifelian/Givetian boundary of Morocco and from the Frasnian/Famennian boundary of Belgium, Germany, southern France, China, and Nevada.

Michel Coen was the editor, together with Luc Hance and Hiou Hongfei, of a dozen papers on the Devonian-Carboniferous transition beds of central Hunan, South China. Anybody who was an editor, especially those who faced moving through languages and cultural barriers, will understand that ostracods represent only a small chapter in this book. He had the opportunity, however, to go to China again, where he is now focusing on Tournasian ostracods of Guangxi. Extension into Vietnam is also considered.

Koen Martens Research topics in 1996: (1) continuing studies on taxonomy, morphology, and ecology of African non-marine ostracods, with special reference to southern and eastern Africa; finalizing a fauna on the non-marine ostracods of southern Africa; (2) taxonomy, morphology and ecology of non-marine Israeli ostracods; (3) comparative and evolutionary ecology of zoobenthos in large and ancient lakes (Baikal, Tanganyika, Nyasa/Malawi, and Titicaca), partim ostracods. Taxonomy of Tanganyikan Cytheracea is conducted together with Karel Wouters, of Lake Baikal ostracods together with Galina Mazepova, of Lake Titicaca together with Philioppe Mourguiart. (4) For Treatise: post-Cretaceous non-marine Cypridacea and Limnotheridae; (5) Coordinator of the EEC-network on "Evolutionary ecology of reproductive modes in non-marine ostracods", which runs from January 1, 1994 to December 31, 1996.

Research topics in 1997: as in 1996, with two additions: (1) writing up results of the EU network in the form of a book on reproductive ecology of non-marine ostracods; (2) in collaboration with Isa Schoen and Erik Verheyen, Comparisons between morphological and molecular evolution in the Cytherissa species flock in Lake Baikal.

Papers in press: (1) Martens, K., Wurdig, N.L., and Behen, F., 1997, Non-marine Ostracoda, in Young, P.S., ed., Catalogue of Crustacea from Brasil: Museum Nacional, Serie Livros 6; (2) Martens, K., Ostracoda, in Day, J.A., Stewart, B. and Louw, E., eds., A guide to the freshwater crustaceans of southern Africa; (3) Martens, K. and Wouters, K., De Ostracoda (Crustacea) van de Blankaart, in De Cleer, K., ed., Het Natuurreservaat ‘De Blankaart’ (Woumen, West-Vlaanderen), een ekologische inventarisatie: Studiedokumenten Instituut voor Natuurbehous, Hasselt, p. 1-8; (4) Martens, K., Diversity and endemicity of Recent non-marine ostracods (Crustacea, Ostracoda) from Africa and South America: a faunal comparison: Verh. Internat. Verein. Limnol., 26; (5) Martens, K., On two new crenobiont ostracod genera (Crustacea, Ostracoda, Herpetocypridinae) from Africa and Asia Minor, with the description of a new species from dolomitic springs in South Africa: South African Journal of Science, Festschrift for P.H. Greenwood; (6) Rossui, V., Gentile, V., Geiger, W., Martens, K., and Menozzi, P., Low genetic variability and Hardy Weinberg equilibrium in European all female populations of Darwinula stevensoni (Crustacea, Ostracoda); (7) Alin, S., Cohen, A.S., Bills, R., Gashagazxa, M.M., Michel, E., Tiercelin, J.J., Martens, K., Coveliers, P., Mboko, S.K., West, K., Soreghan, M., Kimbadi, S., and Ntakimazi, G., Evaluation of Rapid Assessment technique for monitoring biodiversity in large tropical lakes: a case study from Lake Tanganyika: Biological Conservation; (8) Griffiths, H.I., Pietrzeniuk, E., Fuhrmann, R., Lennon, J.L., Martens, K., and Evans, J.G., Tonnacypris glacialis comb. nov. (Ostracoda, Cyprididae): taxonomic position, (palaeo-)ecology and palaeo distribution: J. Biogeography; (9) Rossetti, G. and Martens, K., On Darwinula stevensoni Brady and Robertson: A Stereo Atlas of Ostracod Shells; (10) Martens, K., Speciation in Ancient lakes (review): Trends in Ecology and Evolution 12; (11).

Isabelle Schoen is continuing genetic work on non-marine ostracods. After her time in England, where she studied genetic consequences of asexual reproduction as part of the European network "The evolutionary ecology of reproductive modes in non-marine ostracods", she now moved on to Belgium. Together with Koen Martens, Erik Verheyen and Galina Mazepova, she has started a new project on the Cytherissa-flock from Lake Baikal in January 1997.

Papers in press: Schoen, I., Di Maso, E., Gandolfi, A., Griffiths, H.I., Verheyen, E., and Butlin, R.K., The application of molecular techniques to the study of ostracods, in Crasquin, S., Braccini, E., and Lethiers, F., eds., Proceedings of the 3rd European Ostracodologists Meeting, Bulletin des Centres de Recherches Exploration-Production Elf-Aquitaine.

Guy Wansard is continuing research on (1) the incorporation of trace-elements in lacustrine ostracod valves, from laboratory cultures and field collections (in collaboration with J.R. Roca, Barcelona and F. Mezquita, Valencia) and (2) paleoclimate and paleoenvironmental reconstructions based on lacustrine ostracods (assemblages and valve geochemistry) from Quaternary sequences in Spain (with the team of R. Julia, Barcelona) and France.

Papers in press: Wansard, G., Reconstruction paleoenvironnementale des derniers 30,000 and la sequence de La Draga (Banyoles, Espagne), d’duite des rapports (Sr/Ca) et (Mg/Ca) des valves d’ostracodes lacustres: Societe belge de Geologie.

Karel Wouters is continuing research on marine and brackish Cypridacea, and on marine interstitial ostracods, from the Indo-Pacific, mainly from Papua New Guinea. He is preparing a paper on a remarkable new genus of the Family Pontocyprididae, and on the taxonomic position of the Family Saididae. Together with Koen Martens, he is studying the Cyprideis species flock from Lake Tanganyika.

 

BRAZIL

Correspondent: Joao Carlos Coimbra

Joao Carlos Coimbra I am teaching invertebrate palaeontology for undergraduate students. I am teaching some micropalaeontological topics for graduate students. Current work in progress includes: (1) Cretaceous marine and nonmarine Brazilian ostracode palaeoecology, biostratigraphy, and taxonomy; (2) Brazilian marine shallow water ostracodes--taxonomy and zoogeography; (3) ostracodes from Pelotas Basin, southern Brazil; and (4) ostracodes from Sepetiba Bay, Rio de Janeiro State--taxonomy and ecology.

Papers in press: (1) Carreno, A.L., Coimbra, J.C., and Sanguinetti, Y.T., Biostratigraphy of Late Neogene and Quaternary ostracodes from Pelotas Basin, southern Brazil, Gaia, Lisboa; (2) Ramos, M.I.F., Coimbra, J.C., Whatley, R., and Moguilevsky, A., Taxonomy and ecology of the Family Cytheruridae (Ostracoda) in Recent sediments from the northern Rio de Janeiro Coast, Brazil: Journal of Micropalaeontology, London.

I am supervising a M.Sc. Thesis about ostracodes from mangroves localized in the southern Sao Paol State, around the Canaeia littoral region. The student is named Eduardo Geraque and is developing his thesis at Oceanographical Institute at Sao Paulo University.

Luis Carlos da Silva Freitas This current year we held a short workshop (January 27-31) in our laboratory, due to the visit of Mr. Galm to Natal (RN), a specialist on ostracods and calcareous nannoplankton, who also works for Petrobras S.A., but in the Sergipe-Alagoas Basin. During this quick week it was possible to discuss the main groups of lacustrine ostracods found in the rift sequences of Sergipe-Alagoas and Potiguar basins. One of the most interesting aspects was correlation of genus and species of the Jiquia Local Stage (Barremian-Aptian in age) in between the two basins studied, since the discovery of such association in the Potiguar Basin has been very recent and the occurrence of ostracodes very scarce. We intend to write a report about the main conclusions of these correlations as soon as possible.

A current work in progress is a report about a new positioning of the Biostratigraphic units used in the Potiguar Basin, since I intend to insert a Lower Buracica Stage (in discussion) and a Jiquia Stage (both local stages) into the Biochronostratigraphic chart still in use.

I have also been involved with the training of a new specialist into the ostracod method. His name is Carlos Jose de Souza and he will be responsible from May 1997 on, to the readings and studies of the ostracod association in the Ceara and Potiguar Basins supporting biochronostratigraphic information to future exploratory locations.

From July on, I will be back to the Organic Geochemistry Laboratory located in the Center of Research of Petrobras, Rio de Janeiro, RJ, working mainly with the correlation of hydrocarbon source rocks and the main oil fields of certain continental Brazilian basins.

Jarbas V.P. Guzzo finished his M.Sc. thesis on paleolimnology of a Cretaceous lacustrine sequence of the Reconcavo Basin (NE Brazil) at the Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul. I am now working with biostratigraphy and paleoecology of nonmarine ostracodes of eastern Brazilian marginal basins, mainly with Campos Basin data.

Paulo da Silva Milhomem is currently working on his M.Sc. thesis at Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul. The thesis focuses on high resolution stratigraphy of the fluvial-deltaic-lacustrine cycles which characterize the Aratu local Stage (Hauterivian?-Barremian) in Reconcavo Basin, Northeastern Brazil.

Iraja Damiani Pinto Although he is retired since 1992, he has a very fruitful production in Paleozoic insects and macro crustaceans from Brazil, Argentina, and South Africa. He has one Ph.D student working on marine shallow water southern Brazilian ostracodes, Maria Ines Feijo Ramos

Yvonne T. Sanguinetti She is retired, but has the last Ph.D student, Dermeval Aparecido do Carmo, whose dissertation deals with the taxonomy, biostratigraphy, and paleoecology of the continental ostracodes from Alagamar Formation (Portiguar Basin, Lower Cretaceous), northeastern Brazil.

Norma L. Wurdig She is studying benthos (including some ostracodes) from lagoons and lakes from Rio Grando do Sul State, southern Brazil.

 

CANADA

Pierre Ascoli has continued his biostratigraphic studies on Mesozoic Ostracoda from offshore wells of the Canadian Atlantic Shelf.

Willi K. Braun After three years of "retirement", I am still fully engaged in finalizing my Devonian (Eifelian to Frasnian) and Jurassic (Middle to Upper Jurassic) ostracode studies of western Canada--a task more time consuming that originally estimated. Presently I am "going over" all my collections that have accumulated over 40 years, computerize all worthwhile information, and integrate them with those I "inherited" from Shell Canada Ltd. and from former graduate studies. My aim is to hand them over, in due time and good standing, to the Geological Survey of Canada, for the micropaleontological studies at this University ceased with my retirement.

At hand are a number of drafts about the stratigraphic results and geologic implications of our studies, to be published as soon as I have finished my review of the exact ranges of the species and their spatial distribution. Preliminary results were published earlier, as were the outlines of zonal schemes which will be formalized as "sequences" because they represent faunal divisions bounded by unconformities. The taxonomic monographs of the diverse and abundant ostracode faunas (about 800 species of Devonian and 100 species of Jurassic ostracodes) have been assigned secondary importance and urgency for the time being and until the new Treatise volume is published which, hopefully, will clarify the uncertainties and confusion on the generic level and stabilize the taxonomy of the Paleozoic ostracodes.

Geoffrey W. Davis hopes to publish his Honours thesis on microfossil evidence of Holocene salinities and sea levels in Notre Dame Bay, Newfoundland.

Ursula Grigg is revising the checklist of local living ostracods and filling gaps in the Nova Scotia Museum of Natural History’s collection. I am still interested in the genus Perissocytheridea.

Paul D.N. Hebert Our investigations during 1996 continue to focus upon the analysis of breeding system evolution in ostracodes. We are currently engaged in the development of a CD-ROM describing the ostracod fauna of the Great Lakes.

Papers in press: (1) Chaplin, J.A. and Hebert, P.D.N., Cyprinotus incongruens (Ostracoda): an ancient asexual: Mol. Ecol. 6; (2) Little, T.J. and Hebert, P.D.N., Clonal diversity in high arctic ostracodes: J. Evol. Biol.

Student thesis: T.J. Little, On the consequences of restricted gene flow: reproduction and speciation in freshwater ostracodes.

Qadeer Siddiqui is continuing to work on the Early Tertiary marine ostracods of the Sulaiman and Sor Ranges of Pakistan. He is still interested in the ostracods of the Canadian east coast. He attended the 3rd European Ostracod meeting in Bierville, France, and spoke on the genus Neocyprideis in the Early Tertiary of the Sulaiman and Sor Ranges.

 

PEOPLES REPUBLIC OF CHINA

Correspondent: Peng Jin-Lan

Cao Mei-Zhen continues work on the Jurassic Ostracoda from North China.

Feng Xiao-Jie is involved in the research on Recent, Quaternary, and Tertiary saline lake Ostracoda in NW China. It is hoped that, with further work, a reasonable explanation for the extinction of Cypridea, Austrocypris, and Hemicyprinotus will be gained.

Gou Yun-Xian is working on the late Cenozoic Ostracoda from the Qinghai-Xizang Plateau, China.

Guan Shao-Zheng In 1996 I was engaged in work on the appearance, evolution, extinction , and ecological character of ostracod genus Cypridea. I visited the Tertiary section in the Pingyi Basin, Shandong; measured the Jurassic section in Sanxihe of Zigui, Hubei; identified and collected the Late Jurassic and Early Cretaceous ostracods in some areas of Sichuan Province, such as Huili, Yibin, Yenshou, Zhongjiang, etc.

Hou You-Tang and Gou Yun-Xian continue their revision of Ostracoda of China, Part 2.

Jiang Fei-Hu is working on (1) palaeontology and stratigraphy of Carboniferous-Quaternary (mainly Jurassic-Tertiary) in Yili Basin, western Xinjiang; (2) Cretaceous Ostracoda from the Baiyingchagan Seg, Erlian Basin, Inner Mongolia, and their applications in the Stratigraphic Classification and Correlation. In 1997 I will work on stratigraphy, classification, and correlation of the lower Cretaceous-Quaternary in the Muglad Basin, Sudan, middle eastern Africa.

Peng Jin-Lan is in the second year of his Ph.D. thesis entitled "Ostracod fauna and their environmental significance during past 200,000 in Yunnan-Gui Plateau, China"

Sun Zhen-Cheng is working on Recent and Quaternary Ostracoda, Foraminifera, and calcareous nannofossils from saline lakes in NW China. Together with Yang Fan and others, I am continuing work on "Cenozoic lake Sedimentary Environment and Petroleum Origin" and Cenozoic Ostracod fauna and stratigraphy from Qaidam Basin and Tarim Basin, NW China.

Wang Shang-Qi continues work on the origin, evolution and extinction of the Sinoleperditiini (Leperditiidae) from the Devonian of south China. Three papers on palaeocopids, platycopids, and podocopids respectively from the Devonian of Dacaozhi, Yunnan, China were finished in 1996 and will be published this year. I will visit France this year and do cooperative research with Dr. J. Vannier on the functional morphology of the Palaeozoic Leperditidopes.

Zhao Quan-Hong is working on (1) Cenozoic deep-sea Ostracoda of the West Pacific and their paleoceanographic implications, (2) Late Quaternary deep sea Ostracoda of the South and East China Seas, (3) paleolimnological study of Paleogene oil-bearing basins off the Pear River estuary, (4) Quaternary stratigraphy and environment of continental shelf of China Seas, (5) compiling paleogeographic map of last glacial maximum of West Pacific, (6) database of modern marine ostracods of China Seas (with Dr. Zhou Bao-Cun).

 

CZECH REPUBLIC

Correspondent: Jaromir Zelenka

Jan Kantorek continues in his study of Recent freshwater Ostracoda.

Jirka Kopecky is a first year Ph.D student of hydrobiology at the Department of Zoology and Ecology at the Masaryk University, Brno. I have started studying living ostracods in different types of pools in the inundation area of lower parts of the Morava and Dyje Rivers in our republic. My supervisor is Dr. Jan Kantorek. I have been working with ostracods for a short time (during my Master’s program), I was interested in ecology of zooplankton in temporary and permanent pools, so I am still looking for basic references and learning to determine this group of animals. I will take part in the 13th ISO in Chatham. I am preparing a poster where I will compile all earlier findings of ostracod species in the Czech Republic. The poster will contain my first preliminary results as well.

Jaroslav Riha is preparing a new paper, together with S.K. Khalef and I.Y. Al-Shareefi from Iraq on Paleozoogeography of Recent Ostracoda from North West Arabian Gulf.

I created my web pages in December, 1996. There is some information about the 12th ISO in Prague, Czech Republic (in English only) and a list of Czech and Slovak ostracodologists in these pages.

Jaromir Zelenka is working as editor of geology and paleontology on the long-time project of Czech Encyclopedia. I am hard at work on that, so I am continuing my study of Neogene ostracodes part time.

 

EGYPT

Ashraf M.T. Elewa Current studies: (1) fournier biometrics, a case study of two species of the genus Bairdoppilata from the Middle Eocene of Egypt and (2) the effect of allochthonous components in the accuracy of results, an examplefrom the Eocene ostracodes of Wadi El Rayan, Fayoum, Egypt.

Papers in press: Elewa, A.M.T., Ostracod assemblages from the area between Samalut and Beni Mazar on the western bank of the Nile Valley, Upper Egypt: N. Jb. Geol. Palaont. Abh., Stuttgart; (2) Elewa, A.M.T., Omar, A.A., and Dakrory, A.M., Biostratigraphical and palaeoenvironmental studies on some Eocene ostracods and foraminifers from the Fayoum depression, Western Desert, Egypt: The 1st Scientific Conference (The Role of Science in the Development of the Egyptian Society and Environment), Benha, Egypt.

 

ESTONIA

Tonu Meidla is continuing work on the following topics: (1) the Lower Ordovician ostracods and the formation of the Ordovician ostracode fauna in Baltoscandia, (2) the mid-Caradocian event and the related faunal changes, (3) the latest Ordovician ostracodes, the stable isotope record of the shell material inclusive, and (4) Ordovician stratigraphy and the ostracode biostratigraphy.

Lembit Sarv continued on the completion of the data bank of the Silurian ostracodes of Estonia.

 

FRANCE

Correspondent: J.F. Babinot

Bernard Andreu is working on (1) Lias and Dogger from the "Grands Causses", France; (2) Callovian to Oxfordian from Portugal; (3) Callovian-Oxfordian and Cretaceous from High Atlas, Morocco; (4) Cretaceous from Pyrenees, France.

Projects: (1) synthesis on ostracode assemblages from the late Cretaceous of Agadir and Essaouira Basins, Morocco; (2) ostracode assemblages from the Lias-Dogger and Cretaceous of Pyrenees, France.

Long-term project: Synthesis on ostracode assemblages from the Cretaceous of Morocco: biostratigraphy, paleoecology, paleobiogeography.

Thesis supervision: (1) M. El Attachfini, Cenomanian-Turonian Moroccan Series-lithology, micropalaeontology and sequence stratigraphy; (2) E. Lara Corona, Comparisons between Neo Cretaceous Series from the Sierra Madre (Mexico) and Pyrenees (France); (3) O. Nzaba Macaya, Ostracode assemblages from the Carixian-Domerian of Quercy and Grands Causses, South France: systematics, biostratigraphy, sequence analysis, palaeoecology and palaeobiogeography; (4) M.A. Rossi, Lower Cretaceous ostracodes from the Agadir and Essaouira regions, Morocco.

Jean-Francois Babinot is working on (1) Berriasian to Early Valanginian from southeastern France (Provence) with J.P. Masse and A. Virgone, Marseille; (2) Maastrichtian to Danian ostracode assemblages (Cretaceous/Tertiary boundary) from Mahajunga Basin, Malagasy Republic (with J.P. Colin); (3) ostracodes around the Cretaceous/Tertiary boundary, with Y. Tambareau, J.P. Colin, J. Rodriguez-Lazaro); (4) Messinian basinal and carbonate platform deposits from western Algeria, eastern Morocco, and southeastern Spain; (5) Neogene to Quaternary of Corsica (with M. Ferrandini, Corte Univ.)

Thesis supervision: Soraya Boukly-Hacene: Messinian microfaunas from western Orania, Algeria: biostratigraphic and paleoenvironmental implications, Comparisons with Messinian series of southeastern Spain.

Papers in press: (1) Babinot, J.F., Rodriguez-Lazaro, J., Floquet, M., and Jolet, P., Les associations d’ostracodes du domaine tethysien soulignent que les evenements relatifs a la "crise de la limite Cenomanien-Turonien" se situent dans le Cenomanien superieur: Proc. 3rd European Ostr. Meeting (Paris, Bierville), Crasquin-Soleau, S., Braccini, E., and Lethiers, F., eds.: Bull. Centres Rech. Explor.-Prod. Elf-Aquitaine.

Anne-Marie Bodergat is working on (1) distribution and chemical composition of ostracode carapaces in Kagoshima Bay (Japan), collaboration with K. Oki, K. Tomita (Kagoshima Univ., Japan), K. Ishizaki (Sendai Univ., Japan), G. Carbonnel, M. Rio, G. Vidal (Lyon Univ., France); (2) palaeoecology and biostratigraphy of Jurassic ostracodes in southeastern France and Morocco.

Thesis supervision: (1) Mohamed Hajjaji, Ostracods from the Plio-Pleistocene of Rhode (Greece): palaeoecological significance of assemblages; (2) L. Picot, Oligocene lacustrine and marine environments in Limagne (France): palaeobiology and geochemistry of ostracode populations.

Papers in press: (1) Bodergat, A.M., Rio, M., and Ikeya, N., Tide versus eutrophication: impact on ostracods populations structure of Mikawa Bay (Japan): Rev. Micropal., 40(1): 3-13; (2) Rio, M., Bodergat, A.M., Carbonnel, G., and Keyser, D., Heterogeneity in the distribution of elements in the carapace of Ostracoda: the example of Leptocythere psammophyla, in Proc. 3rd European Ostr. Meeting, Paris Bierville, Crasquin-Soleau, S., Braccini, E., and Lethiers, F., eds., Abstracts; (3) Rio, M., Bodergat, A.M., Carbonnel, G., and Keyser, D., Anisotropie chimique de la carapace des ostracodes, exemple de Leptocythere psammophyla (Crustacea, Ostracoda): C.R. Acad. Sci.

Eric Braccini is working on petroleum routine analyses and thin sections (all geological settings and worldwide areas). He is also working on (1) Early Cretaceous (Pre-salt) of Cabinda; (2) Early Cretaceous from the Netherlands; (3) Senonian from southern France; (4) graphic correlation applied to exploration, using ostracode assemblages from Senonian of Peru.

Papers in press: (1) Braccini, E., Denison, C. Orsolini, P., Scheevel, J.R., Jeronimo, P., and Barletta, V., A revised stratigraphic framework for the pre-salt in Cabinda, Angola: Bull. Centres Rech. Explor.-Prod. Elf-Aquitaine.

Giles Carbonnel is working on taxonomic report of Neogene ostracodes from Algeria (30 years of sampling collected by various authors) in a palinspastic frame. Current research in progress involves developing software for taxonomic determination of ostracods (with dynamic describers used in a relational approach).

Jean-Paul Colin is working on: (1) Albo-Aptian ostracodes from Brazilian and West African intra-cratonic lakes; (2) Maastrichtian to Paleocene ostracodes from Mali and Pakistan (with Y. Tambareau); (3) Intra-Trappean limnic ostracodes from India (with A. Bandhari, Dehar Dun, India); (4) Aptian non-marine ostracodes from Portugal (with M.C. Cabral, Lisboa).

Papers in press: (1) Colin, J.P., Tambareau, Y., Krasheninnikov, V., An early record of the genus Cytheridella Daday, 1905 (Ostracoda, Limnocytheridae, Timiriaseviinae) from the Upper Cretaceous of Mail, West Africa: palaeogiogeographical and palaeoecological considerations: Jour. Micropal.; (2) Colin, J., Tambareau, Y., and Kracheninnikov, V., Maastrichtian and Paleocene ostracode assemblages of Mali (western Africa): Dela Opera SAZU, Ljubijana, Slovenia.

Sylvie Crasquin-Soleau is working on (1) Permian and Triassic ostracodes from Tethys (Greece); (2) Peri Tethyan realms (Russia, Romania, North Africa, Oman).

Papers in press: (1) Atudorei, V. Baud, A., Crasquin-Soleau, S., Galbrun, B., Gradinaru, E., Mirauta, E., Renard, M., and Zerrari, S., Extended scientific report of project 95-32, The Triassic of North Dobrogea, Peri-Tethys programm, p. 1-60.

Papers in press: (1) Crasquin-Soleau, S., First Upper Paleozoic ostracodes from British Columbia (Canada): Harper Rande Group: Palaeontographica; (2) Crasquin-Soleau, S., Braccini, E., and Lethiers, F., eds., What about Ostracoda?: Proc. 3rd European Ostracodologists Meeting, Bierville, Paris, Special volume, Elf-Aquitaine; (3) Crasquin-Soleau, S. and Barrier, E., eds., Peri-Tethys: Mem. 3, Mem. Mus. Hist. Nat.; (4) Crasquin-Soleau, S. and Lethiers, F., Dissemination des ostracodes neritiques par les courants de surface au Carbonifere superieur-Permien: Rev. Inst. Geol. et Geophysique, Bucarest; (5) Crasquin-Soleau, S., Rakus, M., Oujidi, M., courell, L., El Touhami, M., and Benaquiss, N., Decouverte d’une faune d’ostracodes dans le Trias de Monts d’Oujda (Maroc): relations paleogeographiques entree les plates-formes nord et sud de la Tethys: C.R. Acad. Sc. Paris; (6) Crasquin-Soleau, S. Rakus, M., Oijjidi, M., Courel, L., El Touhami, M., and Menaquiss, N., Decouverte d’une faune d’ostracodes dans le Trias des Mnonts d’oujda (Maroc): relations paleogeographiques entre les plates-formes nord et sud de la Tethys: C.R. Acad. Sc. Paris; (7) Crasquin-Soleau, S. and De Weaver, P., eds., Stratigraphic correlations in Peri-Tethys realm: Tethys Contribution 2, Geodiversitas, Mus. Hist. Nat. Mu.s.; (8) Crasquin-Soleau, S. and De Weaver, P., eds., Stratigraphic correlations in Peri-Tethys realms: Tethys Contribution 2, Geodiversitas, Mus. Hist. Nat. Paris; (9) Molotovsky, E., Molotovskaya, I.I., and Crasquin-Soleau, S., Depositional conditions in southern Cis-Urals Basin during the Late Permian (biostratigraphy, lithologic facial and petromagnetic data), in Stratigraphic Correlations in peri-Tethys realms, Crasquin-Soleau, S. and De Weaver, P., eds., Peri-Tethys Contribution 1, Geodiversitas, Mus. Hist. Nat. Paris; (10) Said-Benzarti, R. and Crasquin-Soleau, S., Les ostracodes du Permien superieur de Tunisie reconnu en subsurface: Proc. 3rd European Ostr. Meeting, Paris-Bierville, Crasquin-soleau, S., Braccini, E., and Lethiers, F., eds.: Bull. Centres Rech. Explor.-Prod. Elf-Aquitaine.

Renee Damotte is working on (1) non-marine Permian ostracodes (with F. Lethiers); (2) Mid-Cretaceous ostracodes from Tunisia (with I. Zghal). In preparation: Cretaceous to Paleocene ostracodes from Syria (with F. Igel, Cl. Guernet).

Papers in press: (1) Zghal, I. and Damotte, R., Les Ostracodes du Vraconien du Jebel Mhrila (Tunisie Centrale): Cahiers Micropal., N. Ser. 10(1): 5-17; (2) Zghal, I., Damotte, R., and Bismuth, H., Les ostracodes de l’Albien du Koudiat El Beida (J. Mhrila, Tunisie Centrale): Rev. Micropal., 39(1): 67-90.

Renee will retire on July 1997, We wish to our friend a merry new life and good health!

Pierre Donze is working on stratigraphy, mainly in Tunisia.

Claude Guernet is working on (1) bathyal ostracodes from Paleocene to Recent in the Atlantic Ocean (ODP sites from the Guinea Gulf and Black Nose), and (2) Paleogene ostracodes from the Tethyan area.

Thesis supervision: Rafika Chait, Bathymetry of ostracodes and foraminifers on the Atlantic or Mediterranean borderland in France, Iberian Peninsula, and Morocco (Management--Guernet and Renard, Paris).

Papers in press: (1) Guernet, C., Neogene and Pleistocene ostracodes of Sites 959 and 960, Gulf of Guinea: Proc. Init. Report ODP, Part B; (2) Guernet, C., Bioevenements et ostracodes du Maestrichtien au Repelien dans les bassins du Nord-Ouest de l’Europe: Sonder. Des Geol. Inst. Univ. Koln.; (3) Guernet, C. and Molina, E., Les ostracodes et le passage Paleocene-Eocene dans les Cordilleres Betiques (coupe de Caracava, Espagne): Geobios.

Francis Lethiers is working on: (1) Devonian to Permian ostracode faunas; biostratigraphy, palaeogeography, and palaeoecology; (2) Upper Devonian and Permian-Triassic events with reference to ostracode faunas; (3) Permian freshwater ostracodes.

Papers in press: (1) Lethiers, F., Damotte, R., and Whatley, R., Evidence of brooding behaviour in Permian non marine Ostracoda (Crustacea): Lethaia.

Pierre Marmonier is working on: (1) variation of morphological characteristics in Cryptocandona kieferi from the Rhone, Rhine, and Danube Rivers (with D. Danielopol, Mondsee, Austria); (2) ecology and systematics of interstitial ostracodes from interstitial ostracods from active and dead channels of the Rhone River (with C. Claret, M.J. Dole-Ollivier, M. Creuze Des Chatelliers).

Papers in press: (1) Marmonier, P., Creuze Des Chatelliers, M., Dole-Ollivier, M.J., Plenet, S., and Gilbert, J., Rhone groundwater systems, in Ecosystems of the world, subterranean biota, Wilkens, Culver, and Humphreys, eds., Elsevier.

Philippe Mourguiart working on (1) taxonomy and ecology of Bolivian ostracodes (with Koen Martens), and (2) paleoclimatology of the Central Andes during the last 50,000 years.

Thesis supervision: Maria Eugenia Montenegro--On Recent and Quaternary ostracods of Lake Titicaca and their use as palaeoecological indicators.

Papers in press: (1) Argollo, J. and Mourguiart, Ph., Escenarios paleohigrologicos y paleoclimaticos de los ultimos 30,000 anos en los Andes Bolivianos, in K. Garless, ed., Bamberger Geographische Shriften.

Henri J. Oertli continued abstracting of papers on Post-Paleozoic ostracodes for the "Zentralblatt fur Geologie und Palaontologie" (approx. 100 papers analysed in 1996).

Thesis supervision: Jacques Sauvagnat (Geneva Univ., Switzerland) on Aptian-Albian ostracodes of the Swiss and Franch Jura Mountains and their worldwide position.

Papers in press: (1) Martin, L., Bertaux, J., Correge, T., Ledru, M.P., Mourguiart, Ph., Siffedine, A., Soubies, F., Wirrmann, D., Suguio, K., and Turcq, B., Astronomical forcing of contrasting rainfall changes in tropical South America between 12,400 and 8800 early BP: Quaternary Research, 47: 117-122; (2) Mourguiart, Ph. and Correge, T., Ecologie et paleoecologie des ostracodes actuels et holocenes de l’Altiplano bolivien: Bull. Centres Rech. Explor.-Prod. Elf-Aquitaine; (3) Siffedine, A., Bertaux, J., Mourguiart, Ph., Martin, L., Disnar, J.R., and Laggoun-Defarge, F., Etude de la sedimentation lacustre d’un site de foret d’altitude des Andes centrales: implications paleoclimatiques: Bull. Soc. Geol. France.

Jacques Sauvagnat is working on Aptian to Albian ostracodes from the Jura Mountains (France, Switzerland) under the supervision of H.J. Oertli. Dissertation in progress, with hope to finish in the near future.

Yvette Tambareau is working on (1) continental to deep marine ostracode assemblages around the Cretaceous/Tertiary boundary (with J. Rodriguez-Lazaro, E. Gracia-Zarraga, J.F. Babinot, J.P. Colin); (2) Early Paleogene marine ostracodes from Pakistan (with J.P. Colin); (3) Pyrenean ostracodes around the middle/upper Eocene boundary.

Papers in press: Tambareau, Y., Hottinger, L., Rodriguez-Lazaro, J., Villatte, J., Babinot, J.F., Colin, J.P., Garcia-Zarraga, E., Rocchia, R., and Guerrero, N., Communautes fossiles benthiques aux alentours de la limite Cretace/Tertiaire dans les Pyrenees: Bull. Soc. Geol. France.

Jean Vannier Current work in progress includes: (1) physiological processes (respiration, circulation, nutrition) in crustaceans, including living and fossil ostracods, phyllocarids, and bradoriids (with D.J. Siveter, M. Williams, and K. Abe); (2) biomechanics of feeding in ostracodes and phyllocarids (with K. Abe); (3) role of ostracods in Recent and ancient marine food webs (with K. Abe); (4) planktonic faunas (crustaceans and other arthropods) in the Palaeozoic; (5) carapace ultrastructure (SEM, TEM) and hydrodynamics in ostracods; (5) conservatism in marine crustaceans exemplified by phosphatized myodocopids from Spitzbergen (with W. Weitschat); (6) Palaeozoic (Ordovician to Siluro-Devonian) ostracodes from Argentina and Bolivia; (7) contributions to the Treatise (Leiocopa, Leperditicopa, Paraparchitocopa); (8) editor of Europal, the newsletter of the European Palaeontological Association.

I will visit K. Abe (Shizuoka University, Japan) in May, 1997.

Papers in press: (1) Vannier, J. Williams, M., and Siveter, D.J., The Cambrian ancestry of circulation in crustaceans: Lethaia; (2) Vannier, J., Boissy, Ph., and Racheboeuf, P., Locomotion in Nebalia bipes: a model for Palaeozoic crustaceans: Lethaia.

Students and thesis topics: Christophe Croquelois (postgraduate student): Functional morphology of Recent halocyprid ostracodes from Japan: Application to planktonic faunas in the Palaeozoic; Maria Jose Salas (Crodoba, Argentina) is doing her Ph.D. on Ordovician ostracodes from Argentina (systematics, biostratigraphy, palaeobiogeography) (co-supervised with Prof. Benedetto).

 

GERMANY

Correspondent: Dietmar Keyser

Guenther Arlt is working in a BMBF-Project about the significance of the meiofauna of the pelagial and benthal connections. Ostracods are playing an important role for they are changing constantly the structure and combination of the sediment surface and influence in this way the disposition for resuspension of material into the water column. He is studying the species diversity, abundance, and seasonal variability of ostracods in the coastline of the Baltic Sea. Ostracods are especially useful in the artificially designed sulfidic mud-sand-surfaces and in the studies about the microbial mats formed in shallow areas.

Gerhardt Becker continued (1) the revision of the Treatise (Superfamilies Kirkbyacea, Nodellacea, Bairdiocypridacea and (Paleozoic) Bairdiacea), (2) the studies on pelagic ostracods along the Devonian/Carboniferous boundary in Central and West Europe, and (3) the documentation of Devonian ostracods occurring in the neritic facies realm of the Cantabrian Mountains (N Spain). And, although retired, a lecture in palaeontology (preparation techniques) was given.

H. Blumenstengel is working on palynology and the Tertiary. He also will continue his work at home just for fun with the Devonian and lower Carboniferous ostracods especially connected to the Thueringer Oekotyp and also shallow water faunas.

Gerson Fauth is studying the palaeoenvironmental, palaeogeographic, and biostratigraphic distribution of marine ostracodes of the Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary in the Pernambuco-Paraiba Basin, northeastern Brazil. The research is being done as a Ph.D. project at the Institute of Geology and Palaeontology of the University of Heidelberg, under the supervision of Peter Bengston and Eduardo A.M. Koutsoukos.

Peter Frenzel is continuing his work about Holocene and Recent ostracods of the Greifswalder Bodden (Baltic Sea) and adjacent areas.

Roland Fuhrmann The Recent and Quaternary freshwater ostracods are still the subject of his scientific interest.

Wolfgang Hansch Due to my responsibility for the reconstruction of the Heilbronn Museum of Natural History, ostracod research is at present not even a hobby. Furthermore, I had to change my research field more to the Triassic. Nevertheless, a paper about the Thuringian ostracods of the Silurian is still in progress.

Joachim Harloff remains interested in Triassic to Jurassic and Recent ostracods with respect to stratigraphy, taxonomy, ecology, oceanography, and computerized shape analysis. He will be glad to see communications or reprints of recent papers on related research. Currently he is interested in ostracods by private means, trying to keep in touch with Ostracodologists.

A paper on Recent his benthic foraminiferal assemblages and ecology of the southwest Atlantic Ocean is in press (06 to 07, 1997, Marine Micropal.)

Ekkehard Herrig is continuing his work on taxonomy, biostratigraphy, palaeobiology, and paleoecology of Upper Cretaceous ostracods, especially from Pleistocene erratics.

Ingelore Hinz-Schallreuter Current research projects: (1) monographic study of the ostracod fauna of the Middle Cambrian Borregard Member of the Exsulans Limestone (Middle Cambrian) of Bornholm, (2) phylogenetic relationships within the Ostracoda, and (3) continuation of the Treatise work.

Horst Janz was in the last year mainly busy with investigations of the Miocene Steinheimer Kratersee and found unexpectedly 44 different species. This will be published this year. Also, another publication with two species of Strandesia will be published in the Kempf Festschrift. He plans a cooperation with Dr. Abe in Japan.

Thomas Jellinek Together with Noriyuki Ikeya and Akira Tsukagoshi,, a paper on Cythere pumila Brady, 1866 from southern Australia has been worked out and will be published in 1997. Also in 1997, cooperation on two new projects will be established: (1) ostracodes from Tertiary sediments along the Turkish Dardanelles, and (2) as part of an IMAGES-Programm: Ostracods from deep-sea sediments of the Tasman Sea.

Eugen K. Kempf is continuing his work on the "Cologne Database of Ostracoda". In 1996, with over 1200 references to taxonomic papers, he published Bibliography C as volume 9 of the series "Index and Bibliography of Marine Ostracoda". The three published bibliographies dealing with marine Ostracoda are covering now nearly 8000 references to relevant publications.

Volumes 6 to 9 of "Index and Bibliography of Nonmarine Ostracoda" are approaching their final state and shall be published in 1997. Work is also in progress on other parts of the database (Strati graphical Index, Geographical Index). It would be of great help if all Ostracodologists would send reprints of their ostracod papers immediately after publication. Cordial thanks to all those who did so in the past. Unpublished parts of the database are sent in exchange for reprints, as far or as soon as those are available.

Dietmar Keyser continues his work of the Aral Sea Project and, together with Dr. Nagorskaja (Minsk) on a project about ostracods of Belorussia.

Karina Kussius continued her doctoral thesis on ostracods of the Upper Jurassic of the eastern Ibarian Basin.

Alexander Liebau returned for a short time to his material from the Upper Jurassic material of NW Germany. Besides that, he continues with homologizing sculpture studies of A-6 and smaller instars. His paper on this matter, which he presented at the Bierville meeting last year, did not achieve the quality level to be published in the proceedings, but now there are chances to include in the Kempf volume (Cologne).

Wolf Gerth starts a dissertation under Alexander’s supervision; he wants to study the sculptural evolution of genera like Hemicytherura and/or Callistocythere. The topics of his research are the (phylo- and onto-) morphogeny of trachyleberid ostracods.

Renate Matzke-Karasz published her Ph.D thesis on new microstructural and biochemical characteristics of species of Scottia, Psychodromus, Cyclocypris, and Mesocypris.

Nasser Mostafawi continues to work on the ecology, stratigraphy, and systematics of Neogene ostracods from the Aegean Islands. Some paper are in press. The study will be transferred to the Dardanelles and the Thracia area.

Erika Pietrzeniuk is working on Pleistocene freshwater ostracods.

Roger Schallreuter Current research: (1) continuation of Treatise work, (2) Ordovician ostracods of Novaya Zemlya (in cooperation with A.V. Kanygin, Novosibirsk).

Burkhard Scharf continues his work on the living ostracods of the River Elbe and Oder. He has finished a paper on the ostracods of the Mueritz National Park in Germany. Until now he has worked on lake restoration, paleolimnology, and paleoclimatology.

Carol Schoening continues her work on Holocene ostracods of dried lakes in Sudan and in Asia. She is now starting work on the ostracods of Bermuda, together with Ruediger Volbrecht and Dietmar Keyser.

Michael Schudack continues his research on ostracods, charophytes, and foraminifers. Main focus is on biogeography, biostratigraphy, and paleoclimatology (using different approaches, with growing emphasis on stable isotope geochemistry). Current research activities include studies of ostracods from (1) Late Jurassic in Europe and North America (with F. Peterson, Denver, and K. Kussius and U. Schudack, Berlin); (2) Holocene of Satonda Crater Lake (with J. Reitner, Gottingen); (3) Holocene lakes of the Gobi Desert (with H.-J. Pachur and M. Walter, Berlin).

Future projects (depending on the success of grants we have applied for) may focus on ostracods from the (1) Rhaetian (latest Triassic) of central Europe (with G. Bachman, G. Beutler, and E. Dreyer, Halle); (2) Late Jurassic Tendaguru Formation, Tanzania (with H. Heinrich, Berlin); (3) Late Tertiary of the Altai Mountains (with F. Riedel and K. Oppermann, Berlin).

Thesis supervision: Late Jurassic ostracods from eastern Spain (K. Kussius). Details of present research are available on the WWW page http://www.geologic.uni-halle.de/igw/pal/o12/o121.html.

Papers in press: (1) Biostratigraphy, paleoecology, and biogeography of charophytes and ostracodes from the Late Jurassic Morrison Formation, Western Interior, USA: Geol. Soc. Amer. Spec. Pap. (With C. Turner and F. Peterson); (2) Biostratigraphical and biogeographical relationships of the Late Jurassic ostracods from southern Germany: Geol. Blaetter Nordostbayern.

Ula Schudack has finished research on Late Jurassic ostracods from several boreholes in northeastern Germany. She will publish these results as well as her last years revision of the ostracods from the Upper Jurassic of southern Germany in two monographic papers. This year she will start to work on marine and nonmarine ostracods from the Upper Jurassic of northern Spain.

Papers in press: (1) Das Niedersaechsische Oberjura-Becken: Ergebnisse interdisziplaerer Zusammenarbeit: Z. Dt. Geol. Ges. (with F. Gramann, C. Heunisch, C. Hinze, H. Klassen, H. Kockel, F. Katschorek, T. Dulce, D. Thies, M. Weiss); (2) Palaeocytheridea groisii n. sp. (Ostracoda) aus den Moernsheimer Schichten (Tithonium) von Oberhartheim bei Vohburg (Donau): Geol. Blaetter Nordostbayern.

Antje Schwalb My main activities in 1996 were hunting for funding and the transfer from the USA back to Germany, so that my ostracode research has transformed into some sort of side project right now. I continue to work on stable oxygen and carbon isotope stratigraphy from lacustrine ostracodes from lakes in the Midwest, USA, and the Chilean Altiplano. I also participate in ongoing research in Guatemala and the Near East. A compilation of my data is under way and will be subject of the German "super-thesis" (Habilitation) financed by another fellowship (2 years) starting this spring.

Papers in press: Schwalb, A., Hadorn, P., Thew, N., and Straub, F., Evidence for Late-Glacial and Holocene environmental changes from subfossil assemblages and sediments of Lake Neuchatel, Switzerland: Palaeogeogr., Palaeoclimat., Palaeoecol.

Joerg Schwarzkopf continues his work on the ostracods and foraminifers of Cenozoic and Mesozoic times of northwestern Germany, especially about their value for the applied micropalaeontology (stratigraphy and evaluation of palaeobathymetry).

Henning Uffenorde continues his work on Tertiary Ostracoda from northern Germany. He is currently compiling biostratigraphic and palaeoecologic results as potential tools for sequence stratigraphic interpretations. Papers in press: (1) Die Ostracoden der Forschungsbohrung Nieder Ochtenhausen (Miozaen, Nord-Niedersachsen, Deutschland), Bio- und Oekostratigraphie: Geol. Jb.; (2) Ueber Meeresspiegelschwankungen im Tertiaer Norddeutschlands: Ostrakoden als Indikatoren: Sonderveroeff. Geol. Inst. Univ. Koeln.

Agnes Viehofen The shell morphology of limnocytherids from the Miocene of the Steinheimer Becken is still the topic of her research.

R.H. Weiss are continuing their biostratigraphical and paleoecological research of the Paleozoic (especially Devon) of Ruegen and NE Germany, and are very interested in works of paleoecological colleagues.

D. Zissler works on the ultrastructure of the reproductive system of Crustacea and Insecta. His special interest is with ostracods.

 

GREAT BRITAIN

Nigel Richard Ainsworth My main activity concerns my consultancy work on the litho- and biostratigraphy of the Mesozoic basins of Northwest Europe. Current research activities include (1) Statistical analyzes using Ostracoda, in conjunction with wireline logs, with co-worker David Melnyk, (2) ostracod and foraminiferid color change by thermal alteration in both the offshore and onshore sections, (3) Lower Jurassic Ostracoda from the western margins of Scotland, co-worker Ian Boomer.

Papers in press: (1) Boomer, I., Ainsworth, N.R., and Exton, J., A re-examination of the Pliensbachian and Toarcian Ostracoda of Zambujal, west-central Portugal: Journal of Micropalaeontology; (2) Coles, G.P., Ainsworth, N.R., Whatley, R.C., and Jones, R.W., Foraminifera and Ostracoda from Quaternary carbonate mounds associated with gas seepage in the Porcupine Basin, offshore western Ireland: Revista Espanola de Micropaleontologia; (3) Ainsworth, N.R., Braham, W., Gregory, F.J., Johnson, B., and King, C., The stratigraphy of the latest Triassic to earliest Cretaceous of the English Channel and its adjacent areas: Geological Society of London, Special Publication; (4) Ainsworth, N.R., Braham, W., Gregory, F.J., Johnson, B., and King, C., A proposed latest Triassic to earliest Cretaceous microfossil biozonation for the English Channel and its adjacent areas: Geological Society of London, Special Publication.

John Athersuch continues as Managing Director of StrataData, whose core business is the development of StrataBugs, our biostratigraphy data base management system for PC and Unix platforms. I have little time for research. I am completing the Carboniferous chapter for the "Biostratigraphical Atlas of Ostracods".

Ian Boomer Currently coming to the end of LOIS (Land-Ocean Interaction Study) contract looking at micropalaeontology of Holocene sediments on the North Norfolk Coast of East Anglia as indices of sea-level change.

Managing editor of A Stereo-Atlas of Ostracod Shells. Co-organizer of ISO97, to be held at the University of Greenwich in July, 1997.

Ongoing projects include: a revision of the post-Paleozoic Metacopine for the Treatise; Ostracoda of the British Penarth Group (Rhaetian) for a forthcoming Palaeontological Society Field Guide; and the early evolution of the Cytheruridae with Robin Whatley.

I have recently set up a World Wide Web site for the British Micropalaeontological Society with Giles Miller NHM, London, which can be viewed at http://www.nhm.ac.uk/bms/

Gary B. Eisenhauer I am currently writing up my Ph.D "Quaternary Ostracods as Palaeosalinity Indicators of Marginal Marine Environments using trace-element shell chemistry techniques" at Kingston University. This research involves trace element (Sr/Ca and Mg/Ca) shell chemistry analysis, in addition to faunal analysis, of ostracodes from marginal marine environments in order to attempt salinity level reconstructions during times of sea-level change. This involved analysis of ostracod faunas (and their shell chemistry) presently living in The Fleet, U.K. The species analyzes include: Cyprideis torosa (Jones, 1850), Leptocythere lacertosa (Hirschmann, 1912), Leptocythere castanea (Sars, 1866), Cytherois fischeri (Sars, 1866), Xestoleberis nitida (Liljeborg, 1853). These five species were encountered at various locations along the length of the Fleet and subsequently are able to tolerate various salinity regimes. A palaeo-approach to this problem has been undertaken through study of a core taken from the backwash area of Son Bou Beach on the Island of Menorca, in the Mediterranean. This exhibits brackish/fresh (and vice/versa) transitions. Trace element shell chemistry, on Cyprideis torosa and Loxoconcha elliptica, and palaeoecological analysis has been carried out on the ostracods from this core and compared with other proxy data to assess the use of the ostracod trace record in such environments, and as an indicator of sea-level change through palaeosalinity reconstructions. This research was presented as a poster at the 3rd European Ostracodologists Meeting at Bierville, Paris, France.

Michael R. Frogley Currently writing up my Ph.D thesis at the University of Cambridge entitled "The Biostratigraphy, Geochemistry and Palaeoecology of a Long Lacustrine Sequence from NW Greece", supervised by Richard Preece (Cambridge) and Jonathan Holmes (Kingston). The project is concerned with the examination of a 319 meter continuous Quaternary lacustrine sequence that stretches back over 620,000 years. A multi-disciplinary approach has enabled a wide range of physical and geochemical techniques to be employed. Faunal analyzes, particularly stable isotopic studies of the ostracods, have enabled detailed palaeoenvironmental reconstructions for the Last Interglacial and late-glacial D Holocene time periods to be undertaken. The results of some of this work will be presented at ISO97 in Chatham. A Research Fellowship with St Johns College, Cambridge, means that work on this remarkable sequence can continue until at least 1999.

Huw Griffiths is settling down to life in Hull. Work continues to focus on Quaternary and modern freshwater Ostracoda from Europe, but with increasing focus on the Balkans and Near East (Turkey, Iran), and on evolutionary biogeography, these studies involving a wide range of collaborators. Over the last year, I have undertaken field work in various parts of the UK, and in Spain, Slovenia, and Macedonia, and have attended various conferences and meetings/workshops in the UK, France, Slovenia, Spain, and Belgium. Two very sizeable projects have been the production of a database of European Quaternary freshwater Ostracoda for eventual inclusion in the EU "NODE" database (and also published in the monograph series Scopolia), and an ongoing coauthor ship (with Jonathan Holmes) of a Quaternary Research Association Technical Guide on the application of Non-marine Ostracoda from northwestern Europe in Quaternary palaeoecology (publication expected 2nd or 3rd quarter, 1997). A small grant has been made by the Percy Sladen Trust to finance work on the fauna of the Cromerian type-locality West Runton Freshwater Beds and, with Jonathan Holmes and Tim Heaton (NERC Isotope Lab) . We have a NERC Ph.D student, Kevin Keatings, working on ostracod shell chemistries in paleoclimatic reconstructions. It is anticipated, however, that most of the research coming on line over the next 18 months will involve further molecular biogeographical studies, with a particular reference to the Greco-Anatolian landbridge and the Balkans.

Papers in press: (1) Holmes, J.A. and Griffiths, H.J., Ostracoda from Star Carr, in P. Mellars and S.P. Day, eds., Star Carr in Context: New Archaeological and Palaeoenvironmental Investigations at Star Carr, Cambridge, MacMillan Institute for Archaeological Research; (2) Schoen, I., Di Masso, E., Gandolfi, A., Griffiths, H.J., and Butlin, R.K., The application of molecular techniques to the study of ostracods, in S. Crasquin, E. Braccini, and F. Lethiers, eds., Proceedings of the 3rd European Ostracodologists Meeting, Bulletin Centres Rech. Explor. Prod., Elf-Aquitaine; (3) Griffiths, H.J., Butlin, R.K., and Geiger, W., Considerations of timescale effects in the evolution of perthenogenesis in freshwater Ostracoda, in S. Crasquin, E. Braccini, and Letheirs, F., eds., Proceedings 3rd European Ostracodologists Meeting, Bull. Centres Rech. Explor. Prod., Elf Aquitaine; (4) Keen, D.H., Coope, G.R., Jones, R.L., Field, M.H., Maddy, D., Lewis, S.G., Bowen, D.Q., and Griffiths, H.J., Middle Pleistocene deposits at Frog Hall Pit, Stretton-on-Dunsmore, Warwickshire, England, and their bearing on the age of the type "Wolstonian": Jour. Quat. Sci.; (5) Griffiths, H.J., Pietrzeniuk, E., Fuhrmann, R., Lennon, J.J., martens, K., and Evans, J.G., Tonnacypris glacialis comb. nov. (Ostracoda, Cyprididae): taxonomic position, (palaeo)-ecology and distribution: Jour. Biogeography; (6) Griffiths, HJ. and Horne, D.J., Parthenogenesis and palaeobiology; SPB Publishing:.

Jonathan Holmes Summary of activity: non-marine ostracods as palaeolimnological indicators, trace element and stable isotope geochemistry of non-marine shells; organizing committee member of ISO97 and co-guest editor of proposed special issue of Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, to be published from the ‘non-marine ostracod’ session of ISO97.

Current work in progress: (1) Holocene palaeolimnology in the Sahel zone of NE Nigeria; (2) Late Quaternary palaeolimnology, Jamaica; (3) palaeolimnology over the past 2000 years, northern England; (4) Late glacial to Holocene palaeolimnology, SE France.

Papers in press: (1) Holmes, J.A. and Griffiths, H.I., Ostracoda from Star Carr, in Mellars, P. And Day, S.P., eds., Star Carr in Context: New Archaeological and Palaeoecological Investigations at Star Carr, The Macdonald Institute for Archaeological Research, Cambridge; (2) Holmes, J.A., Recent non-marine Ostracoda from Jamaica, West Indies: Journal of Micropalaeontology; (3) Holmes, J.A., Ostracod faunal and microchemical evidence for middle Pleistocene sea-level change at Clacton-on-Sea (Essex, UK): Proceedings 2nd European Symposium on Ostracods, British Micropalaeontological Society, Special Publication; (4) Holmes, J.A., Street-Perrott, F.A., Allen, M., Fothergill, P., Harkness, D., Kroon, D., and Perrott, R.A., Holocene palaeolimnology of Kajemarum Oasis, northern Nigeria: an isotopic study of ostracods, authigenic carbonate and organic carbon: Journal of the Geological Society; (5) Holmes, J.A., Recent non-marine Ostracoda (Crustacea) from Yobe State, Northern Nigeria: Journal of African Zoology; (6) Holmes, J.A., A late Quaternary ostracod record from Wallywash Great Pond, a Jamaican marl lake: Journal of Paleolimnology.

Students and thesis topics: G.B. Eisenhauer, Ostracods as palaeosalinity indicators, Full-time Ph.D, Natural Environment Research Council (NERC)-approved project, funded by Kingston University. Jointly supervised by Dr. S. Juggins (University of Newcastle) and Dr. R.C. Preece (University of Cambridge.

M.P.J. Oakes, Sedimentary records of industrial pollution based on ostracod shell chemistry, full-time M.Phil, funded by NERC studentship to Kingston University. Jointly sponsored by Dr. P.E. Henderson (Fawley Aquatic Research laboratories) and Prof. F.A. Street-Perrott (University of Wales, Swansea). CASE award with Fawley Aquatic Research Laboratories.

K.W. Keatings, The basis of ostracod shell chemistry in palaeoclimatic reconstruction, Full-time M.Phil leading to Ph.D, funded by Natural Environment Research Council studentship to Kingston University. Jointly supervised by Dr. T.H.E. Heaton (NIGL) and Dr. H.I. Griffiths (University of Hull). CASE award with the NIGL (NERC Isotope Geosciences Laboratory).

David C. Horne Currently in the second year of a Ph.D. at the University of Cambridge, entitled "Biostratigraphy and Palaeolimnology of Late-glacial and Holocene lake marls", jointly supervised by Dr. Richard Preece (Cambridge) and Prof. Alayne Street-Perrott (University of Wales, Swansea). It is intended that the shell chemistry, particularly stable oxygen and carbon isotopes, and trace-elements, will be analyzed from two ostracod and mollusk sequences (central and marginal lake cores) from a small lake in central East Anglia, UK. Facilitating a detailed understanding of the lake history (any suggestions gratefully received).

David J. Horne Summary of activity: (1) organization of ISO97; (2) living European nonmarine ostracods; (3) Cretaceous marine and nonmarine ostracods.

Work in progress: Chairman of Organizing Committee of ISO97. Main research activity in 1996 was the final year of our European project "Evolutionary Ecology of Reproductive Modes in Nonmarine Ostracods"; in connection with this several researchers visited Chatham for various lengths of time during 1996, including Gianmarco Paris (Parma), Angel Baltanas, Silvia Sanchez Herrera, and Paloma Acorlo Pages (Madrid), Isabelle Schoen (Leeds), and Koen Martens (Brussels). As part of this project, our NODE (Nonmarine Ostracod Distribution in Europe) GIS database is rapidly becoming a functional tool for ostracod research, with more than 6000 records of living ostracods (as of March 1, 1997). We will be demonstrating node at ISO97 in July. Now that our 3-year EU project is over, NODE will continue to grow and improve; we have set up an editorial board to manage it - potential contributors are invited to contact me for further details. Other activities include ostracod behavioral ecology using high-resolution video-microscopy, and the palaeobiology of selected Purbeck-Wealden ostracod taxa (the latter with Koen Martens in Brussels).

I am currently supervising Ian Slipper (British Turonian ostracods), who should have submitted his thesis by the time CYPRIS appears; Nicky Johnson (ostracod palaeobiogeography during the Cenomanian-Turonian oceanic anoxic event in Europe) whose thesis was examined and approved subject to minor revisions in February, 1997; and Alasdair Bruce (Holocene evolution of the Fleet in Dorset), who is working on ostracods and foraminifers with John Whittaker (Natural History Museum, London) as a second supervisor.

Papers in press: (1) Horne, D.J. and Boomer, I., The role of Ostracoda in saltmarsh meiofaunal communities (paper presented at Linnean Society Conference on British Salt Marshes, April, 1996); (2) Horne, D.J., Martens, K., and Mosslacher, F., A short note: is there brood selection in Darwinula stevensoni? (Presented at the 3rd European Ostracodologists Meeting, Bierville, July, 1996); (3) Horne, D.J., The Purbeck-Wealden, in Wilkinson, I.P., ed., A Stratigraphic Atlas of British Ostracoda.

Caroline Ingram I am currently writing up my Ph.D entitled "Ostracod Palaeoecology and biogeochemistry of marine and estuarine interglacial deposits in North West Europe". This year I have spent a month working with Dr. Karen Luise Knudsen and colleagues in the Department of Micropalaeontology, University of Aarhus, Denmark. I have also submitted my first paper for review, which I hope will be published in 1997.

Nicola Johnson Over the last year I have completed my Ph.D thesis on "Ostracod Biogeography during the Cenomanian-Turonian Oceanic Anoxic Event in Europe" (end of September, 1996). The examination took place on February 17, 1997 and was successful. I am currently job-hunting.

At the beginning of October I started a three-month contract as a mobile element/mobile researcher for the European Network Project "The Evolutionary Ecology of Reproductive Modes in Non-marine Ostracoda". I was based at the Universidad Autonoma of Madrid, Spain, in the Ecology Department, working with Angel Baltanas and Walter Geiger. My work was mainly with the morphometrics of clones and population of Limnocythere inopinata

Papers in press: (1) The Cenomanian-Turonian Oceanic Anoxic Event: New ostracod data from Compton Bay, Isle of Wight, UK: 2nd European Ostracodologists Meeting, Symposium Proceedings; (2) English ostracod biogeography of the Cenomanian-Turonian Oceanic Anoxic Event: 3rd European Ostracodologists Meeting, Symposium Proceedings.

Richard Jones Currently in the third year of a Ph.D studentship awarded by the Institute of Earth Studies at Aberystwyth, working on deep water Quaternary Ostracoda from the Arctic Ocean collected on the ARCTIC 91 cruise. The project was instigated by Prof. R.C. Whatley and Dr. T. Cronin of the U.S. Geological Survey. It is hoped that a palaeooceanographical reconstruction of the Quaternary water masses can be predicted by high resolution sampling from Kastenlot long cores. A paper on this research topic will be presented at ISO97.

Adrian Lane is reconstructing palaeoenvironments around the archaeological site of Butrint, southern Albania. Sediment cores from Lake Bufit, analyses include physical, magnetic, palynological, and ostracodes. Also, stratigraphic reconstructions of the adjacent plains and marshes.

Jonathan Larwood is working on the Environmental Impacts Team of English Nature.

Alan R. Lord is writing up work on ‘Recent’ ostracods from low-oxygen environments in the Gulf of California and NW Indian Ocean; Late Quaternary Ostracoda from Skagen, Denmark; and Jurassic material from offshore western Australia. No current Ph.D or M.Sc. students working on ostracods. EC TMR Research Fellow Dr. Carmen Arias Fernandez, working on Tethyan Jurassic Ostracoda.

C. Giles Miller has had a very quiet year on the ostracod research front. On the curatorial front, I am now dealing with new acquisitions to the ostracod collections here at the Natural History Museum in London.

Papers in press: Miller, C.G., Sutherland, S.J., and Dorning, K.J., Late Silurian (Ludlow-Pridoli) sedimentation and microfossils in the deeper Welsh Basin near Clun, Shropshire: Geological Journal.

Fernando Munoz-Torres I continue work with the project "Neogene non-marine ostracods from the Upper Amazon Basin" under the supervision of Prof. R.C. Whatley at the University of Wales. I am the only person in Colombia currently working on Ostracoda and would be very grateful to colleagues who include me in their mailing lists for papers relating to ostracods. I will go back to Colombia in June. My address is: I.C.P.-EXE, A. Aero 4185, Bucaramanga, Colombia.

David J. Siveter Research continues to concentrate on: Cambrian bradoriids (sensu lato), principally from Britain, North America, the former Soviet Union and China (with Mark Williams); Ordovician and Silurian ostracodes (especially myodocopes; with Jean Vannier), mostly from various parts of Europe including Britain, Scandinavia, Czech Republic, etc.

Ian J. Slipper This year has been spent writing up my Ph.D thesis, which is in the form of a Palaeontographical Society Monograph, and covers Turonian Ostracoda from southern England.

Current work in progress includes a survey of Santonian Ostracoda from Pinden Quarry in Kent as part of a joint project with Chris Wood looking at the stratigraphy, and H. Bailey working on the foraminifers.

Papers in press: The Late Cretaceous chapter in the forthcoming Biostratigraphical Atlas of British Ostracoda, and Ostracoda across the Turonian Coniacian boundary at Dover, S.E. England, 3EOM.

Robin James Smith At present I am continuing studies for my Ph.D on the ostracod fauna of the Santana Formation in NE Brazil. I am currently in my third year. My Ph.D includes study of the palaeobiology of Pattersoncypris micropapillosa, an ostracod with preserved appendages, and the preservation and palaeoenvironment associated with this fauna. Other work currently in progress includes ontogeny and biology of Recent and fossil ostracods.

Matthew I. Wakefield is now Chairman of the BMS Ostracod Group. Research interests are probabilistic biostratigraphy.

Robin C. Whatley continues to work on the Treatise revision (post Paleozoic). A number of chapters and cytherid families are now complete and others are well advanced. Contributing authors are asked to complete their assignments by Christmas 1997. He also continues to work on a number of other projects, such as monographic works on the marine faunas of Pitcairn/Henderson and Easter Islands, with Mark Warne on Bradleya and the Cytheracea of northern Australia, Holocene (sensu stricto) nonmarine faunas of Patagonia, Tertiary deep-sea faunas and shallow water faunas from various parts of the Indo-Pacific, ostracods and oxygen levels and their applications to sequences, etc. He is also writing a book on Darwin in South America.

Life at Aberystwyth has been enlivened in the past year by the presence of Maria Ines Fiejo Ramos who has been working with us on Recent faunas from the South Atlantic and Dermaval do Carmo on Lower Cretaceous ostracods in general and problems of noding in particular. They have now both returned to Porto Alegre but we hope to see them here again during 1997. Gabriella Cusminsky will return shortly to Argentina after 3 months here working on Patagonian lake bed ostracods and Neogene faunas from the Burwood Bank. Fernando Munoz Torres from Colombia is working on Neogene lacustrine ostracods from the Upper Amazon basin.

Although very regrettably, our M.Sc. course in Micropalaeontology was closed down due to short-termism and myopia, a healthy number of research students remain, with Katy Balman working on South Atlantic Neogene deep sea faunas, Richard Jones on the deep water Quaternary Ostracoda of the Arctic Basin, Rebecca Pyne on the ostracods of the English Upper Chalk as part of a major BGS project, and Angela Lamb on the ostracods and their shell chemistry from lake beds in Ethiopia. Brent Wilson is working on foraminiferal (shudder) ecology in Nevis and St. Johns. Caroline Maybury is continuing her work on British and French Pliocene ostracods in her spare time from her employment with Robertson Research and Alicia Moguilevsky continues her studies on ostracod genetics and South American faunas.

Among our visitors last year was Dick van Harten who is co-supervisor of Fernando. We look forward to visits from a number of friends and colleagues who will be in the UK this summer for Greenwich. Robin Whatley has published some 40 papers and edited a couple of books in the past two years. He hopes to work rather less and spend more time fishing in the future. Praestatur laus vituti, sed multo ocius verno gelu tabescit.

Papers in press: (1) Whatley, R.C., The applications of Ostracoda, in Athersuch, J. and others, eds., A Stratigraphical Index of British Ostracoda, Chapman and Hall; (2) Whatley, R.C. and Wilkinson, I.P., The Upper Jurassic, in Athersuch, J. and others, eds., A Stratigraphical Atlas of British Ostracoda, Chapman and Hall; (3) Wilkinson, I.P., Wood, A.M., Maybury, C.A., and Whatley, R.C., The Neogene, in Athersuch, J. and others, A Stratigraphical Index of British Ostracoda, Chapman and Hall; (4) Wood, A. and Whatley, R.C., The genera Muellerina Bassiouni, 1965 and Thaerocythere Hazel, 1967 from the Neogene of NW Europe: Journal of Micropalaeontology; (5) Whatley, R.C. Ayress, M., and Boomer, I., The Subfamily Eucytherurinae (Crustacea, Ostracoda) in the deep sea: Records of the Australian Museum; (6) Whatley, R.C. and Eynon, M., Four new arctic deepwater ostracod species from East Greenland: Proc. 2nd European Symposium on Ostracoda, Glasgow, M. Keen, ed., p. 195-200; (7) Tatman, S. and Whatley, R.C., Ecphysocythere, a new limnocytherid ostracod genus from the Lower Cretaceous of Alberta, Canada: Journal of Micropalaeontology; (8) Boomer, I., Whatley, R.C., and Keyser, D., An investigation of the relationship between diatoms and sediment coatings on the carapace of living specimens of Cyprideis torosa Jones: Proc. 2nd European Symposium on Ostracoda, M. Keen, ed., p. 163-170; (9) Dickson, C. and Whatley, R.C., The biostratigraphy of a Holocene borehole from the North Irish Sea: Proc. 2nd European Symposium on Ostracoda, Glasgow, M. Keen, ed., p. 145-148; (10) Tatman, S. and Whatley, R.C., A palaeontological reconstruction of the ostracod member of the Blairmore Formation, Alberta Canada: proc. 2nd European Symposium on Ostracoda, Glasgow, M. Keen, ed., p. 35-38; (11) Wood, A. and Whatley, R.C., A new biostratigraphical and ecostratigraphical scheme for the Dutch Neogene: Proc. 2nd European Symposium on Ostracoda, Glasgow, M. Keen, ed., p. 121-128; (12) Aguirre, M.I. and Whatley, R.C., The Mactracea and Myacea (Bivalvia) in the marine Holocene of north-eastern Buenos Aires Province (Argentine, South America); indicators of environmental change: Alcheringa; (13) Whatley, R.C. and Roberts, R., The palaeoenvironmental significance of the Ostracoda from a late Quaternary core in the Antarctic: Marine Geology; (14) Whatley, R.C., Kaesler, R., and Staunton, M., The influence of upwelling on the depth distribution of Ostracoda from the southern end of the Magellan Straits: Journal of Micropalaeontology; (15) Huh, M. and Whatley, R.C., New species of Miocene Cytheracean Ostracoda from the Pohang Basin, SE Korea: Journal of Micropalaeontology; (16) Palaeoenvironments and sea-level changes in the northern Irish Sea based upon the ostracod faunas from late-glacial Borehole 89/11 and Holocene Borehole 89/15: Special Publ. On Quaternary Sea Levels; (17) Zhao Quanhong and Whatley, R.C., Distribution of the ostracod genus Krithe and Parakrithe in bottom sediments of the E China and Yellow Seas, in Wang Pinxian, ed., Oceanography of China; (18) Cronin, T.M. and Whatley, R.C., Ostracoda from ODP leg 151 sites 910 and 911: Initial Reports DSDP 151; (19) Lethiers, F., Damotte, R., and Whatley, R., Evidence of brooding behavior in Permian non-marine Ostracoda (Crustacea): Lethaia; (20) Lethiers, F., Damotte, R., and Whatley, R.C., Strategie de reproduction et evolution ostracodes d’eu douce: Rev. de Micropaleontologie; (21) Whatley, R.C., Eynon, M., and Moguilevsky, A., The depth distribution of Ostracoda in the Greenland Sea: Journal of Micropalaeontology; (22) Ramos, M.I., Coimbra, J.C., Whatley, R.C., and Moguilevsky, A., Taxonomy and ecology of Recent Cytheruridae (Ostracoda) from the coast of northern Rio de Janeiro State, Brazil: Journal of Micropalaeontology; (23) Ballent, S. and Whatley, R.C., Ostracodos del Albiano de la Perforacion SC-1 (Santa Cruz 1), provincia de Santa Cruz, Argentina: Ameghiniana; (24) Whatley, R.C., Moguilevsky, A., Toy, N., Chadwick, J., and Ramos, M.I., Ostracoda from the South West Atlantic, Part II: The littoral fauna from between Tierra del Fuego and the Rio de la Plata: Revista Espanola de Micropaleontologia, 24(2); (25) Whatley, R.C., Review of 12th International Symposium on Ostracoda, edited by Riha: Geological Magazone; (26) Ballent, S., Ronchi, D., and Whatley, R.C., The ostracod genus Majungaella Grekoff in Argentina: 3rd Colloq. on the Strat. and Palaeogeography of the South Atlantic; (27) Ballent, S. and Whatley, R.C., The Ostracoda and environmental evidence in the marine Jurassic of Argentina: 13th Colloq. Of African Micropalaeontology, Yaounde, Cameroun; (28) Whatley, R.C., Munoz-Torres, and van Harten, D., A species flock of Neogene Cyprideis from an isolated saline lake in the western Amazon Basin: Proc. 3rd European Symposium on Ostracoda, Bierville, France; (29) Whatley, R.C., Ramos, M.I., Moguilevsky, A., and Chadwick, J., The provincial distribution of Recent littoral and shelf Ostracoda in the South Atlantic: 3rd European Symposium on Ostracoda, Bierville, France; (30) Whatley, R.C. and Moguilevsky, A., The origin and early evolution of the Limnocytheridae: 3rd European Symposium on Ostracoda, Bierville, France; (31) Wilkinson, I., Kolpenskaya, N.N., and Whatley, R.C., The temporal and spatial distribution of Mandelstamia in the late Jurassic of northern and eastern Europe: Proc. 3rd European Symposium on Ostracoda, Bierville, France; (32) Jones, R.L. and Whatley, R.C., The zoogeographical distribution of the deep water Ostracoda in the Arctic Ocean: Proc. 3rd European Symposium on Ostracoda, Bierville, France; (33) Whatley, R.C., Moguilevsky, A., Toy, N., Chadwick, J., and Ramos, M.I., Ostracoda from the South West Atlantic Part III, Recent Ostracoda from the continental shelf of Argentina, Uruguay, and southern Brazil: Revista Espanola de Micropaleontologia; (34) Dickson, C., Whatley, R.C., and Elmore, S., The Recent shallow marine ostracod fauna of Kongsfjorden, northwest Spitsbergen, Svalbard: Journal of Micropalaeontology; (35) Dickson, C., Whatley, R.C., and Elmore, S., The ostracod fauna of a Quaternary borehole east of Spitsbergen, Svalbard: Journal of Micropalaeontology; (36) Whatley, R.C., Moguilevsky, A., Coxil, D., and Ramos, M.I., Deep and shallow water Recent Ostracoda from the Antarctic Peninsula and the South Scotia Sea: Revista Espanola Micropalaeontologia; (37) Zhao Q. and Whatley, R.C., The Cenozoic deep sea Ostracoda of DSDP 292, Palaeoceanographical implications.

Mark Williams I have had a busy year collaborating with BGS mapping teams working on Lower Palaeozoic stratigraphy in Scotland and Wales. Through my role as BMS Ostracod Group Secretary, I helped organize a meeting at Leicester University and a field meeting in the Welsh Borderlands with David Siveter and Matt Wakefield. I’ve also become membership secretary of the UK branch of the Association of Geoscientists for International Development, an organization which helps promote geosciences in developing countries, and am now on the council of the Palaeontographical Society in London. I continue to work closely with David Siveter, Jean Vannier and others on Cambrian bradoriids, phosphatocopids and other bivalved arthropods. A monograph co-authored with David Siveter, on the British Cambrian Bradoriids and Phosphatocoida, is virtually completed.

Ian P. Wilkinson During this past year, I have been completing work on the Late Jurassic Ostracoda from the Russian Platform, England and southern North Sea Basin in collaboration with Dr. N. Kolpenskaya of VNIGRI. Taxonomic problems have been sorted out and distributions examined, and it is hoped that results will be published in the near future. I have now turned my attention to the Jurassic-Cretaceous boundary and hope to present my results at the IRGO meeting at Greenwich in July.

The work that I have been doing on marine and brackish ostracod faunas from the British Aptian has been delayed by other work, but I am hoping to return to this soon and to complete a couple of papers on early Aptian assemblages from the Isle of Wight and eastern England.

I attended the 3rd European Ostracodologists Meeting in Paris during the summer, which was a great success. Thanks are due to Sylvie Crasquin and her organizing committee.

Papers in press: Wilkinson, I.P., Geological periods, in Geology of the United Kingdom, CD-ROM (CD Vision).

 

GREECE

Steven Galoukas I have spent the last 15 months in military service, so I do not have a lot of time available. My activities were actually restricted to the literature search and comparison of fossil ostracod faunas from different areas of eastern Mediterranean. Unfortunately, I do not have any access on a computer network, and if Cypris is published only electronically, it will become practically impossible for me to get a copy. So, I would ask you to send me a printed paper copy if there is such a possibility.

 

HUNGARY

Correspondent: M. Monostori

A. Korecz is working on Neogene marine, marine brackish, and limno-brackish faunas from Hungary.

H. Kozur is working on Carboniferous to Liassic ostracods of the Tethys and on soft parts of Triassic ostracods.

M. Monostori is working on (1) Eocene ostracods and their paleoecology in Hungary; (2) Oligocene ostracods from Hungary and their paleoecology; (3) Cretaceous marine and nonmarine ostracods from Hungary; (4) Jurassic marine ostracods from Hungary; (5) Triassic marine and nonmarine ostracods from Hungary.

 

INDIA

S.K. Battish Though taxonomic studies of freshwater organisms, including Ostracoda, remains the main interest, I am concentrating currently on the biology of freshwater Ostracoda. Investigations carried out on the food and feeding habits of Heterocypris arorai Battish, 1981 revealed it to be an omnivorous feeder, taking living plants, animals, as well as dead and decaying matter along with debris; to some extent this taxon acts as a scavenger and cleans the standing waters. The quality and quantity of its food intake differed during different months.

Anil Bhandari Summary of activities: (1) Atlas of Paleogene ostracodes of Rajasthan basins has been completed and published in 1996 in Paleontographica Indica IV, Geoscience Research Group, KDM Institute of Petroleum Exploration, ONDG, Dehradun, India; (2) organized XV Indian Colloquium on Micropaleontology and Stratigraphy at Dehradun, India and was co-editor of proceedings volume; (3) finalized a paper on Early Paleocene ostracodes of Bengal Basin, India.

Current work in progress: (1) preparation of Lower and Middle Miocene Ostracoda atlas of western basins of India; (2) a paper "Limnic ostracodes from Anjar Intratrappean Beds, Gujurat, Kachcch, India, and a note on their paleoecology and paleobiogeographic affinities" is under finalization.

Papers in press: Non-marine Ostracoda from the subsurface of the Cambay Shale (Eocene) of Gujarat, India, and their paleoecological significance: Revista Espanola de Micropaleontologia, 30(2), 1998.

Rajesh Chopra A student of Prof. Battish is working for his M.Sc. Thesis. Apart from other observations, gemetogenic processes in selected syngamic ostracod taxa is being worked out in detail by him. The investigations will include all the cytological and karyological transformations during gamete formation.

Sunny George was awarded a Ph.D degree on the topic "Studies on freshwater ostracods of Kerala", and joined as scientist in the laboratory of Nelliyampathy Hills Conservation Society (NHCS). Apart from the research on ostracods, my mission in this lab is to develop a freshwater biology reference centre, which will be most useful for future research in this field in India. For this we have already made a network of scientists from the State of Kerala who have received adequate training on the taxonomy and ecology of various freshwater groups in the prestigious institutions of the United States and Europe. Due to the lack of proper initiatives, these trained young scientists are at present confined to their own watertight compartments. I dare hope that this new venture by NHCS laboratory is an extremely important step as far as future limnological research of this part of the world is concerned.

My current work on ostracods includes: (1) the use of non-disarticulated sub-fossil valves of ostracods buried in eroded soil as possible markers of the history of soil erosion of some areas in the mountain ranges of southern western Ghats; (2) the torpidity shown by ostracods among the vanishing swamps of Chalakudy River basin; (3) the presence of large resting egg banks of micro-crustaceans and rotifers buried in mud among the disappearing water bodies of western Ghat; (4) impact of fish introduction on the ostracod fauna of a small artificial lake in a coffee estate; (5) a new project has been started with the assistance of the Indian Spice Board to examine pesticide toxicity in the tea, coffee, cardemon, and paper plantations of the nellayampathy Hills. In this project I am using ostracods as indicators of water and sediment quality among the lakes of the area.

S.M. Hussain has supervised part of the Ph.D research work carried out by Dr. S.G.D. Sridhar and Ms. A. Minikumari. Dr. S.M. Hussain and Mr. N. Rajeshwara Rao have started a collaborative research work on various aspects of Recent marine Ostracoda of the samples collected from the Bay of Bengal, off Karikattukuppam, near Madras.

Papers in press: (1) Raghunath, R., Sreedhara Murthy, T.R., and Hussain, S.M., Ostracode distribution in the inner shelf off Kasargod, west coast of India: Jr. Geol. Soc. India; (2) Sridhar, S.G.D., Hussain, S.M., Periakali, P., and Kumari, V., Ecology of Recent benthic Ostracoda from the Palk Bay, off Rameswaram, southeast coast of India; (3) Minikumari, A., Hussain, S.M., and Mohan, S.P., Recent benthic Ostracoda in the bottom sediments of Bay of Bengal, off Mahabalipuram, Madras: their affinity and zoogeographic distribution.

S.R. Jakhar Besides working with Dr. Khosla, has taken up studies of ostracodes from (1) Jurassic beds of Gora Dongar, Pachchham Island, Kachchh, and (2) early Tertiary beds of Biril Lignite Mine, Barmer.

S.C. Khosla worked on ostracode assemblages from (1) the Siwalik beds of Nepal, (2) Intratrappean beds of East Coast of India, and (3) Jurassic beds of Jumara Dome, Kachchh. In the last study he was associated by Dr. S.R. Jakhar. All the three ostracode assemblages have been identified. Papers pertaining to their taxonomy, age, paleoecology, and paleozoogeography are under preparation and would shortly be submitted for publication.

Dr. Khosla, together with Dr. Jakhar and Dr. Maki H. Mohammed, in a paper published in Micropaleontology on the Ostracods from the Jurassic beds of Habo Hill, Kachchh, Gujarat, has described 49 species. Two genera, Batella and Habocythere, 20 species, Batella clavata, B. depressa, Cytherella kalajarensis, Cytherelloidea bhujensis, C. dhrangensis, C. langijarensis, C. paradifficila, Cytheropteron devai, C. pandeyi, C. saijaniae, Habocythere diluta, H. centrisulcata, Majungaella rasilia, Mandelstamia depechae, Mesocytheridea mathuri, Nophrecythere whatleyi, Procytheridea kachchhensis, Progonocythere haboensis, Schuleridea (Eoschuleridea) soodani, and Trichrodis (Trichordis) gujaratensis, and a subspecies, Majungaella perforata kachchhensis, are new. On the basis of the ostracodes, three assemblage zones have been proposed in this work for the beds of Chari Formation. These are, in ascending order, Zone 1-Progonocythere laeviscula Zone, Zone 2-Poorly fossiliferous Zone, and Zone 3-Pirileberis remota Zone. Late Bathonian-Callovian age is assigned for the beds of Zone 1 and Callovian age for the beds of Zone 2 and 3 of the Chari Formation. The ostracode fauna of the Jurassic beds of the Kachchh shows strongest affinity, besides Rajasthan, with those of the Majunga Basin, Madagascar, and to a lesser extent with Tanzania and central Saudi Arabia. The paleozoogeographic implications of the ostracodes are also discussed in the paper.

M.A. Malik is still continuing his research in Quaternary freshwater ostracodes of Jammu region. Mr. Amarjit Singh Sodhi has been awarded his Ph.D degree on the topic "Distribution and ecology of Quaternary and Recent ostracodes from Jammu" under the supervision of Dr. M.A. Malik. Wherein 28 ostracod taxa have been recorded. The ecology of these taxa has also been discussed in addition to 11 gastropod and 8 charophyte taxa.

U.B. Mallikarjuna ia a Young Scientist Awardee working on ostracod fauna and charophyte flora-based biostratigtraphy and paleoenvironmental analysis of the Gondwana Formations of the Peninsular India under "Young Scientist" project of the Department of Science and Technology, New delhi, India.

A. Minikumari is working on Recent marine Ostracoda of the samples collected from the inner shelf of Bay of Bengal. She has collected 48 sediment and bottom water samples from off Mahabalipuram (near Madras) up to a depth of 45 m, to study the morphology, taxonomy, and ecological aspects of these tiny crustaceans. She has identified 50 taxa, estimated the sediment and water parameters, and correlated these parameters to evaluate the congenial conditions for better thriving of these microorganisms. She submitted the synopsis of her Ph.D thesis to the University of Madras, entitled "Systematics, distribution and ecology of Recent Ostracoda from off Mahabalipuram, near Madras, Tamilnadu, South India" under the supervision of Prof. S.P. Mohan, Department of Geology, University of Madras, and will be shortly submitting her Ph.D thesis.

H.M. Nagaraja Work is under progress on the project titled "Ostracodes from the Cretaceous-Tertiary succession of the Cauvery Basin, South India". One of the students, Mr. S. Sugumaran, has prepared a thesis for submission for the award of Ph.D degree with the title "Geologic studies of the Cretaceous-Tertiary succession of Vridhachalam area, Tamil Nadu, South India". We are currently engaged on ostracodes of the Lower Cretaceous (Parur Formation) of Vridhachalam area and Upper Cretaceous of Thanjavur areas in Tamil Nadu, South India.

I and my students Mr. S. Sugumaran and U.B. Mallikarjuna participated and presented research papers at the following conferences: (1) XV Indian Colloquium on Micropaleontology and Stratigraphy, Dehra Dun, July 1996; (2) Golden Jubilee Conference on Physical and Biological Changes across the Major Geological Boundaries, Lucknow, November, 1996; (3) Indian Science Congress, Geology Section, New Delhi, January 1997.

Papers in press: (1) Suguwaran, S., Nagaraja, H.M., and Mallikarjuna, U.B., Ostracode fauna of the Patti Formation (late Cretaceous) from the Vridhachalam area, southern India: Paleobotanist; (2) Suguwaran, S. and Nagaraja, H.M., Statistical study of ostracode fauna from the Late Cretaceous (Maestrichtian) of Vridhachalam area, Tamil Nadu, South India: Everyman’s Science.

M.L. Nagori is continuing his research on the lower ostracodes of Lakhapat region, Kachchh. Presently he is finalizing a paper on the genus Semicytherura and paleoecology.

Pratap Singh worked out in detail ostracods of Eocene and Cretaceous strata of Jaisalmer Basin, Rajasthan. The paper entitled "Ostracoda from the subsurface Khuiala Formation of Manhera Tibba well-1, Jaisalmer, Rajasthan, India" is being sent to the press. The paper deals with the thirty-two species of ostracods belonging to twenty-two genera of ten families. Of the thirty two species, nine species are new.

Worked in detail freshwater and marine ostracods of the Paleogene sequence of Cambay Basin. The paper, entitled "Paleogene Ostracoda and their significance in depositional history in subsurface sequence of Broach-Jambusar Block, Cambay Basin, Gujarat, India" is under preparation. It deals with twenty six species of Ostracoda. Out of 26 species, 14 belong to fresh-brackish water ostracodes and the rest of the species are marine. Biostratigraphic zones based on ostracods are identified and correlated with the ostracod zone of the other wells.

A paper entitled "Ostracoda from the subsurface Cretaceous strata of Manhera Tibba well-I and Shahgarh well-B, Jaisalmer Basin, Rajasthan, India, with special remarks on foraminiferids" is submitted to the press for publication. The paper deals with 28 species of Ostracoda. Out of 28 species, 25 are new. A new genus, Harionella, has been identified and two ostracod zones: Cytherelloidea ghotaruensis Range zone (995-1115 m) and Majungaella rajendrai Range zone (Albian-Cenomanian) and in the lower part (Turonian) of the Parh Formation (Turonian-Coniacian).

At present, I am engaged in the study of Paleogene Ostracoda of Cambay Basin, Kachchh Basin, Rajasthan Basin, and Subathu Basin.

S.G.D. Sridhar has been awarded Ph.D degree for his doctoral thesis entitled "Ecology, distribution and systematics of Recent Ostracoda from the Palk Bay, off Rameswaram, Tamilnadu" on 06.12.1996. He carried out his research work under the supervision of Late Prof. V. Ragothaman and co-supervision of Prof. P. Periakali. After the demise of Prof. V. Ragothaman, the remaining part of the research was supervised by Prof. P. Periakali, Department of Applied Geology, University of Madras.

 

IRAQ

Correspondent: Saleh K. Khalaf

J,M.T. Al-Bashir is investigating Cretaceous and Tertiary Ostracoda from different localities in Iraq.

Sanad A. Al-Khashab I completed my M.Sc. Thesis, entitled "Ostracoda of Tanuma Formation in Borehole EB-12 Northeast Baghdad City, Iraq" in early 1996. I would like to thank all colleagues who sent me papers during my M.Sc. research. I am now continuing my Ph.D. thesis (starting in October, 1996) on Cenozoic Ostracoda from Middle West and North Iraq.

Papers in press: Papers on taxonomy, biostratigraphy, paleoecology, and paleozoogeography of Tanuma Formation (Coniacian Age) will be done in late 1997.

S.S. Al-Sheikhly is continuing his work on Recent and Cretaceous Ostracoda from Iraq. His Ph.D student, Wajih A.K. Al-Jumaily has completed his thesis on Quaternary Ostracoda from southern Iraq.

S.K. Khalaf is continuing work on Recent, Tertiary, and Cretacous Ostracoda from northern and southern Iraq. Work in progress: The ostracode family Trachyleberidae from the Tertiary of northern Iraq.

Papers in press: (1) S.K. Kahlaf and R. Jaroslav, Palaeozoogeography of Recent Ostracoda from NW Arabian Gulf; (2) S.K. Khalaf and I.Y. Al-Shareefi, Ecology of Recent Ostracoda from Khor Al-Zubair channel, southern Iraq.

Students and thesis topics: (1) Mrs. N.M. Aziz, Ph.D. student, is writing her thesis on Palaeocene-Eocene Ostracoda from north and northwest Iraq; (2) W.Y. Abdullah, Ph.D student, is investigating middle Cretaceous Ostracoda from southern Iraq; (3) S. Al-Khashab, started his first year for a Ph.D degree.

 

ISRAEL

Amnon Rosenfeld and Avraham Honigstein are continuing to work mainly on Mesozoic and Early Cenozoic (Eocene) ostracode assemblages from the Middle East area. A paper on Kimmeridgian ostracodes, found in outcrops and subsurface of Israel, was submitted. Currently we work on the taxonomy and paleoecology of Eocene faunas from southern Israel; a joint study with C. Banjamini, Ben Gurion University, Beer Sheva, who will take care of the foraminifers. A. Rosenfeld and A. Honigstein participated in the 30th International Geological Congress in Beijing and intend to attend the ISO 97, where a talk on Pleistocene ostracodes from paleolakes will be presented.

 

ITALY

Correspondent: Gioacchino Bonaduce

Giuseppe Aiello, Diana Barra, Gioacchino Bonaduce are presently working on the bathyal Pliocene of southern Sicily (Punta di Maiata and Monte S. Nicola). The two successions integrated represent all of the Mediterranean Pliocene for a complex of about 250 m. The quantitative analyses will allow the paleoecological interpretation and evolution of the Mediterranean Basin in this time range.

Diana Barra completed the paper on the Tunisian coast ostracods, which has been submitted for publication (Rev. Esp. Micropal.). She is working also on the Holocene evolution of the coastal plains of southern Italy, utilizing ostracods for the identification of coastal marine, brackish, and freshwater environments.’

Giuseppe Aiello is completing his Ph.D on the Turonian-Early Messinian ostracods of southern Italy.

Papers in press: (1) Barra, D., The shallow-water marine ostracods of Tripoli (Libya) and their geographical distribution in the Mediterranean: Rev. Esp. Micropal.; (2) Barra, D., and others, Holocene paleoenvironments and Magna Grecia settlements at the mouth of the River Sele (Campania, southern Italy): Consorzio Catania Ricerche; (3) Barra, D., and others, The Versilian transgression in the Volturno River plain (Campania, southern Italy): palaeoenvironmental evolution and chronological data: Atti Convegno AIQUA-MTSN, Modificazion Climatiche ed Ambientali tra il Tardiglaciale e l’Olocene antico in Italia; (4) Bonaduce, G., Barra, D., and Aiello, G., The areal and bathymetrical distribution of the genus Henryhowella Puri (Ostracoda) in the Gulf of Naples: 3rd European Ostr. Meeting.

Claudio Belis has recently finished his Ph.D work on Quaternary ostracods from central Italy. I am now searching for a postdoctoral position.

Papers in press: (1) Belis, A., Palaeoenvironmental reconstruction of Lago di Albano during the Late Pleistocene using fossil ostracod assemblages: Proceed. 7th Internat. Symposium "The interactions between sediments and water": Weater, Air, and Soil Pollution; (2) Lami, A., Guilizzoni, P., Ryves, D.B., Jones, V.J., Marchetto, A., Battarbee, R.W., Belis, C.A., Bettinetti, R., Manca, M., Comoli, P., Nocentini, A., and Langone, L., A late Glacial and Holocene record of biological and environmental changes from the crater Lake Albano, central Italy: An interdisciplinary European project (PALICLAS), Proceedings of the 7th International Symposium "The interactions between sediments and water": Water, Air and Soil Pollution; (3) Manca, M., Nocentini, A.M., Belis, C.A., Comoli, P., and Corbella, L., Invertebrate fossil remains as indicators of late Quaternary environmental changes in Latium crater lakes (T. Albana and L. Nemi), in P. Guilizzoni and F. Oldfield, eds., Palaeoenvironmental Analysis of Italian Crater Lake and Adriatic Sediments: Mem. 1st Ital. Idrobiol, 55.

Giorgio Benassi, Valeria Rossi Benassi is working on the ecology and taxonomy of planktic ostracods with Irene Ferrari, Sandra Sel, and Ken McKenzie in different projects: National Project P.N.R.A. in Antarctica (Ross Sea); International Project P.N.R.A. in the Magellan Straits; National Project EOCUMM95 (CoNISMa) in the Mediterranean Sea (off Eolian Islands). Valeria Rossi, Pacic Menozzi, Giorgio Benassi, Gentile Giovanni, Andree Gandolfi, Giampacic Rossetti continue their activities on Eucypris virens and Darwinula stevensoni.

Papers in press: (1) McKenzie, K.G., Benassi, G., and Ferrari, I., Amphipods, mysids, euphauelids, chaetognaths, ostracods, in Guglielmo, L. and Ianora, A., eds., Zooplankton of the Straits of Magellan, Cariboo Cruise, Austral Summer 1991, vol. 2: Springer Verlag; (2) Benassi, G., Ferrari, I., Rossi, V., Sei, S., Angel, M.V., and McKenzie, K.G., Planktonic ostracods off the Eolian Islands (Mediterranean Sea): Seme Congree Europeen des Ostracodologisies, Paris-Bierville, 8-12 Julio; (3) Ferrari, I., Benassi, G., Sei, S., McKenzie, K.G., Planktonic ostracods in the Ross Sea: CoNISMa Workshop Internat. Ecologie del Mare di Ross (Antarctic), Taomina; (4) Moroni, A. and Benassi, G., Ostracoda of the Italian ricefields ecosystem 1960-1986: Cartograf. Parma.

Students and thesis topics:

Andrea Gandolfi, doctoral student, DNA markers in the population genetics of E. virens, D. stevensoni, H. incongruens

Silvia Zandonati, undergraduate student, Population genetics of E. virens

Roberta Zendonati, undergraduate student, Population ecology of bisexual populations of E. virens

Antonella Tommasi, undergraduate student, Population ecology of D. stevensoni

Eletta Todeschi, undergraduate student, Population genetics of D. stevensoni

Anita Notaro, undergraduate student, Population ecology of E. virens

Chiara M. Magnani, undergraduate student, Planktonic ostracods off the Magellan Straits

Maria Luisa Colalongo, Giancarlo Pasini are working on reconstructing eustatic events which took place in the Emilia-Romagna region during the late Quaternary. Current work in progress: The Emilia-Romagna region is sponsoring geological research on the Po River plain with the aim of producing surface and subsurface geological maps at the scale of 1:50,000. This program will last some years. For this purpose, continuous core boreholes, till 200 m depth, are being taken in the plain. M. Colalongo and G. Pasini are studying the foraminifers and ostracods of these boreholes to reconstruct the transgressions and regressions which took place in the region in the late Quaternary. C14 and 87Sr/86Sr dating provide the basis to establish a sequence stratigraphic framework.

Papers in press: Amorosi, A., Colalongo, M.L., Pasini, G., and Preti, D., Sedimentary response to Late Quaternary sea-level changes in the Romagna coastal plain (northern Italy): Sedimentology.

Alessandro Bossio, Barbara Dell Antonia Alessandro is continuing his studies on the Neogene Ostracoda of Tuscany and of the Salentina Peninsula (Apulia). Barbara is currently in her second year of a Ph.D entitled "Contribution to the taxonomy, biostratigraphy, and palaeoecology of the Miocene ostracofaunas of the Apulian-Iblean Foreland and of the Maltese Archipelago with palaeogeographic considerations", supervised by Bossio.

Papers in preparation: (1) Bossio, A., Ciampo, G., Mazzei, R., and Salvatorini, G., The Plio-Pleistocene succession of Pisticii (southern Italy); (2) Bossio, A. and Dell Antonia, B., The Miocene Ostracoda of the Island of Lampedusa (Sicily Strait).

Elsa Gliozzi studies Italian Neogene-Quaternary freshwater and brackish ostracodes as biochronological and palaeoenvironmental indicators of different sites in central and southern Italy. At present she is involved in the study of Late Miocene brackish water assemblages coming from several localities of northern and central Italy (Velona and Baccinello basins, Tuscany; Tortonian-early Messinian; Cura di Vetralla (Latium), Monticino quarry (Emilia Romagna), and Perticara (Marche), uppermost Messinian). In collaboration with Ilaria Mazzini, she is studying the palaeoenvironmental evolution of the Tyrrhenian coastal sector near Orbetello (Tuscany, Late Pleistocene-Holocene) and of the Rieti Plain (Lazio, middle Pleistocene-Holocene). These two research efforts are carried out on sediment core samples.

Papers in press: (1) Gliozzi, E. and Mazzini, I., Palaeoenvironmental analysis of early Pleistocene brackish marshes in the Rieti and Tiberino intrapenninic basins (Latium and Umbria, Italy) using ostracods: Palaeogeogr., Palaeoclim., Palaeoecol.; (2) Calderini, G., Calderoni, G., Cavinato, G.P., Gliozzi, E., and Paccara, P., The upper Quaternary sedimentary sequence at the Rieti Basin (central Italy): a record of sedimentary response to environmental changes: Palaeogeog., Palaeoclim., Palaeoecol.; (3) Cipollari, P., Cosentino, D., Esu, D., Girotti, O., Gliozzi, E., and Praturlon, A., Central Apennines (Italy) accretionary wedge: recognition of lacustrine environment in a Late Messinian thrust-top basin: Palaeogeogr., Palaeoclim., Palaeoecol.; (4) Gliozzi, E., Late Messinian brackish ostracod assemblage of Paratethyan aspect from Le Vicenne (Abruzzi, central Italy): Palaeogeog., Palaeoclim., Palaeoecol.; (5) Gliozzi, E. and Mazzini, I., Palaeoenvironmental analysis of the 250,000 year Quaternary sediment core of Valle di Castigiione (Latium, Italy) using ostracods: Bull. Rech. Pau; (6) Taliana, D., Alessio, L., Allegri, I., Capasso Barbato, C., De Angelis, C., Girotti, O., Gliozzi, E., Improta, S., Mazzini, I., and Sardella, R., Preliminary report on Holocene deposits of Grotta del Lago near Triponzo River Neva Valley, Umbria: Il Quaternario.

Mario Masoli, Romana Melis, Nevio Pugliese, Gianguido Silvi The team of Trieste is constituted of Mario Masoli, Romana Melis, Nevio Pugliese (coordinator), and Gianguido Salvi. The main activity concerns the systematics, ecology and palaeoecology of the recent and late Quaternary ostracods coming from Mediterranean area (shelf, brackish and fresh water settings), Magellan Strait, and Ross Sea. Works in progress concern the ostracod distribution of some Italian shelf areas (Golfo di Noto, Sicily; central Adriatic Sea) and the Magellan Strait, the palaeoecological and palaeoclimatic meaning of the Ross Sea ostracods coming from core samples, the ostracod palaeoecology applied to the archaeology, and the ecology of the system of the Mantova Lakes.

Papers in press: Montenegro, M.E., Pugliese, N., and Bonaduce, G., Shelf ostracods distribution in the Italian Seas.

Students and thesis topics: Five students are preparing their theses. The topics are: Recent Ostracods of the Bonifacio Strait (Sardinia, Italy); ostracod distribution in the Pacific sector of the Magellan Strait; freshwater ostracods coming from Mantova area

Giuliano Ruggieri, Carolina D’Arpa are continuing their study on the shelf ostracods of the Pliocene of Altaville Milicia (Palermo, Sicily).

Papers in press: Ruggieri, G. and D’Arpa, C., Ostracodi marini del Pliocene Superiore di Altavilla (Palermo): Secondo Contributo, Naturalista Sicil.

Pietro Miculan is continuing his research on Miocene marine ostracods of the Mediterranean area. Presently he is working on Middle Miocene, deep-marine ostracods from southeastern Sicily (southern Italy).

 

JAPAN

Correspondent: Katsumi Abe

Katsumi Abe (and his students) is working on the natural history of a bioluminescent myodocope, including feeding behaviour (with Jean Vannier), co-evolution between a parasitic isopod and its host ostracod (with Jun Horiuchi), chemical cues for the origin of someunique characteristics acquired by a luminescent ostracod (with Takuo Ono, Koshi Yamada, Nasono Yamamura). He published a text book "Natural History of Ostracoda", with Prof. Noriyuki Ikeya (Univ. Tokyo Press in 1996).

Keiichi Hiruta has completed a doctoral thesis "Ostracod Biostratigraphy of the Lower Cretaceous Wakino Subgroup in Northern Kyushi, Japan".

Shin-Ichi Hiruta I working on (1) faunal study of myodocopids from Shimabara, Kyushi, (2) bio-ecology of interstitial ostracods from Hokkaido, and (3) morphology of Vargula species.

Noriyuki Ikeya has finished a series of field work in Australia and New Zealand with a fund of the Monbusho International Scientific Research Program (1994-96) on "Crustacean biogeography in the western Pacific--diversification processes of the littoral fauna". The preliminary reports were submitted in Japanese. He is now working on ostracodes collected from about 300 points during this project with co-workers (K. Abe, R. Ross, A., Tsukagoshi). Three graduate students are working on thesis samples: (1) Asako Konosu (Intraspecific relationship within the genera Spinileberis and Ishizakiella based on DNA analysis; (2) Gengo Tanaka (Biogeography and quantitative analysis of Ostracoda off southeast Asia for the application to Plio-Pleistocene Japanese warm water fauna); (3) Makiko Egashira (Taxonomy of warm water Ostracoda from the Japanese Plio-Pleistocene Kakegawa Group distributed in Shizuoka, Japan). Three undergraduate students are studying ecology and taxonomy of Ostracoda.

Kyosuke Ikuta My doctoral thesis was on the comparative ovarian morphology and histology and oogenesis in the maxillopod crustaceans. I am now studying on the ovarian structure and oogenesis in ostracods, such as a myodocopid Vargula hilgendorfii, a halocyprid Conchoecia imbricata, and a podocopid Cyprinotus uenoi.

Toshiaki Irizuki is working on (1) Early to Middle Miocene ostracodes from Japan in association with global climatic change, with Prof. K. Ishizaki; (2) ostracode faunal changes during middle Pleistocene climatic cycles.

Kunihiro Ishizaki Work in progress includes (1) Neogene ostracodes, with emphasis on paleoenvironmental analysis; (2) Holocene ostracodes of Kagoshima Bay (joint work with Bodergat and Oki); (3) Miocene ostracodes of the Sendai area--supplementary work to my 1966 report.

Takahiro Kamiya (and his students with a research project) is interested in (1) DNA analysis of some cytheracean ostracodes for phylogenetic work, and (2) phylogeny of higher taxa based on the ontogenetic change of the pattern of pore systems.

Students: Hirokazu Ozawa (D2), Taxonomy and paleoecology of the Plio-Pleistocene Omma-Manganjian ostracodes; (2) Fumi Okamoto (M2), DNA analysis of some crustacean ostracodes for ostracode phylogenetic work; (3) Tsuyoshi Matsuzaka (M2), Recent cold water ostracodes around Japan; (4) Toru Ishi (M1), Evolution and biogeography of the genus Loxoconcha.

Ryoichi Tabuki I am continuing mainly on (1) the ecology and taxonomy of ostracodes from the Sekisei-sho area, the largest barrier reef in the Ryukyu Islands, and (2) the ostracode fauna of submarine caves in the Ryukyu Islands. I completed the study with Prof. Tetsuro Hanai on a new troglobitic ostracode genus from submarine caves in the Ryukyu Islands, and am now preparing its publication.

Akira Tsukagoshi I am working on the segmentation of Ostracoda with Dr. Andrew R. Parker (Australian Museum) and on heterochrony and ontogeny of pore-system with Dr. Takahiro Kamiya (Kanazawa University). In Podocopina, the segments from which the male and female copulatory organs have been derived were observed using SEM with freeze drying method. The results will be presented at ISO97 in UK.

Michiko Yajima I am preparing the Exhibition of Franz Hilgendorf at five museums in Japan and two museums (university museums) in Japan. Dr. Franz Hilgendorf (1839-1904) was the foreign employee in the Meiji Era and was a collector of Vargula hilgendorfii.

Michiaki Yumoto I left Kumamoto University in December, 1996, and now working at GRNS Secretariat, Earth Observation Research Center, the National space Development Agency of Japan (NASDA). I am interested in the phylogeny of Sinocytheridae. I will start to research on fossil ostracods from the Pleistocene Narita Formation distributed in West Ibraki Prefecture.

 

JORDAN

S.H. Basha is working on research on Upper Cretaceous microfaunas from South Jordan. Papers will be published this year on "On the Upper Cretaceous-Tertiary outcrops at Southern Wadi Araba" and "Callovian-Oxfordian Foraminifera and Ostracodes from the Upper Jurassic, Arda Road, Jordan".

A M.Sc. thesis on the biostratigraphy of some Risha wells in NE Jordan is completed under my supervision. Before ending the spring course, a student will defend his M.Sc. Thesis on the contact of the Cenomanian-Turonian boundary in central Jordan under my supervision.

 

KOREA

Min Huh is working on (1) marine Miocene Ostracoda from the Korean Peninsula and its adjacent seas (East Sea, Japan, and Russian samples); (2) Quaternary Ostracoda using the cores from the East Sea (Sea of Japan); (3) non-marine Cretaceous Ostracoda from the southwestern area of Korean Peninsula; (4) Recent marine Ostracoda from the adjacent sea of Korean Peninsula, with Dr. Schornikov and Dr. L.H. Lee. We are studying on ostracodes as indicators of water pollution. General interests include paleoecology and paleobiogeographic research. Simultaneously, he is working ondDinosaur and pterosaur tracks from the Cretaceous Uhangri Formation, Korea. He is now a responsible scientist of Dinosaur Project of Uhangri Area. He first found the pterosaur tracks from Asia.

Papers in press: (1) Huh, M. and Whatley, R.C., New species of Miocene Cytheracean Ostracoda from the Pohang Basin, SE Korea: Jour. Micropalaeontology; (2) Huh, M. and Whatley, R.C., New species of Miocene cytheracean Ostracoda from the Pohang Basin, SE Korea: Jour. Micropaleontology.

Yong-Kee Kim has completed his Doctoral thesis on "Recent Ostracoda on the Southeastern Sea of Korea" last February.

E.H. Lee has been very busy with public and personal duties. Last year he was engaged in a national committee project to establish a National Museum of Natural History in Seoul. Presently he is working on biostratigraphy and biogeography of ostracods in a number of cores from the Late Cenozoic of the Cheju Island. This year he starts a joint investigation with E.I. Schornikov and Min Huh on Ostracods as indicators of water ecosystem dynamics, comparison between the east coast of Korean Peninsula and the coast of Russia. I also continue work on the taxonomy and distribution of Recent marine ostracodes from shallow seas around the Korean Peninsula, and on ostracods from the bays of Louisiana.

Papers in press: Lee, E.H., Paik, K.H., and Choi, D.K., Ordovician ostracods from the Upper Joseon Supergroup in Dngjeom area, Korea: Jour. Paleontol. Soc. Korea, 12.

Kwang-Ho Paik resigned recently for health reasons.

 

LUXEMBOURG

Correspondent: Karel Wouters

Claude Meisch is continuing research on the systematics and geographical distribution of Recent freshwater Ostracoda of Europe and the Mid Atlantic Isles. A comprehensive fauna of the freshwater Ostracoda of western and central Europe is in preparation.

Papers in press: (1) New records of freshwater Ostracoda from the Canary Islands (with G. Beyer and K. Wouters); (2) Checklist of freshwater Ostracoda of Hungary (with L. Forro).

 

MEXICO

Correspondent: Ana Luisa Carreno

Ana Luisa Carreno Current work includes (1) A post-Miocene ostracode study from Pelotas Basin, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil (with Joao Carlos Coimbra, Universidad Federal do Rio Grande do Sul; (2) continuation of long-term research on Baja California Tertiary calcareous microfauna and microflora (ostracodes, foraminifers, calcareous nannoplankton). For the time being, the project concerning Neogene ostracodes with PEMEX continues to be interrupted.

Teaching activities: (1) advising a M.Sc. Research project (Guillermo Alvarado V.) On the lacustrine ostracods and the paleoenvironmental reconstruction of Laguna de Babicora, Chihuahua, Mexico, with the collaboration of Manuel Palacios-Fest (Department of Geosciences, University of Arizona).

Papers in press: (1) Carreno, A.L., Coimbra, J.A., and Sanguinetti, Y.T., Biostratigraphy of Late Neogene and Quaternary ostracodes from Pelotas Basin, southern Brazil: Ghaia; (2) Carreno, A.L., Los ostracodos en la frontera del Cretacico-Terciario in Carreno, A.L. and Montellano-Ballesteros, M., eds., Extinciones del Cretacico-Terciario: Mitos y Realidades: Union Geofisica Mexicana, Monografia 4; (3) Carreno, A.L., Coimbra, J.C., and Sanguinetti, Y.T., Post-Miocene paleoenvironmental evolution at the Pelotas Basin, southern Brazil.

Papers in preparation: Carreno, A.L. and Coimbra, J.C., Cytherurideos da plataforma equatorial brasilera.

Ma. Luisa Machain-Castillo and F. Raul Gio-Argez continue working on (1) Quaternary ostracodes of the Mexican seas, particularly on diversity and distribution patterns; (2) Quaternary fresh and brackish-water ostracodes for paleoecological and archeological reconstructions; (3) Eocene-Oligocene ostracodes of the Mexican Gulf Coastal Plain.

Ongoing papers: Ostracoda of the Upper Eocene in Veracruz, Mexico.

 

MOROCCO

Correspondent: Ratiba Bekkali

Rossi Abdelhamid is working on Lower Cretaceous ostracodes of Essaouira-Agadir Bassin (Atlas atlantique-Maroc). He is preparing a thesis "These de Doctorat d’Etat marocaine" supervised by Andreu Bernard (UPS Toulouse III, France).

Current projects: (1) to participate to the "Colloque International des Bassins Sedimentaires Marocains" (Septembre 1997 in Kenitra University); (2) to participate in the "Colloque sur les Marges Tethysiennes d’Afrique du Nord" (December 1997 in Paris).

Driss Nachite, Ratiba Bekkali are working on (1) Neogene lacustrine Ostracoda of Granada Basin (south of Spain) and Saiss Bassin (north of Morocco), and (2) Recent limno-brackish Ostracoda from the N.O. of Morocco.

Papers in press: Bekkali, R. and Nachite, D., Caracterisation des biotopes a partir des Ostracodes dans le marais Smir-Restinga: Gull. Inst. Scient. Rabat (Morocco).

 

NETHERLANDS

Correspondent: Dick van Harten

Martin Bless works on ostracodes from the Carboniferous of Algeria and the Late Cretaceous of the SE Netherlands and NE Belgium and their biostratigraphic and paleoecologic aspects.

Theo Lissenberg continues working on Jurassic and Cretaceous ostracodes and foraminifers from both onshore and offshore boreholes in the Netherlands.

Katja Philippart and Chris Winter are working on Holocene variations in the ecosystem of the North Sea and Skagerrak using ostracodes. They particularly concern themselves with the time prior to the industrial revolution.

Willem van den Bold continues working on his synopsis of the Neogene and Quaternary ostracodes of the Caribbean.

Dick van Harten partially retired this year but continues his ostracod work. He is mainly focusing on environmental aspects with regard to Cyprideis torosa.

Leendert Witte had to discontinue his ostracod activities for the time being due to reorganization of the Geological Survey of the Netherlands.

 

NEW ZEALAND

Correspondent: Stephen Eagar

Stephen Eagar continues a project (with J.D. Collen, foraminifers and M. Ebrahim, Ph.D student) on the biological production of sand from Tarawa (Kiribati), Funafuti (Tuvalu), and Majuro (Marshall Islands). A paper on the ostracods from Tarawa was presented at the 3rd European Ostracod Meeting in France last year. Further work continues on ostracods from other islands in the Republic of Kiribati. While in the UK, he examined the collections of Pacific ostracods at the Natural History Museum in London and at the Department of Geology, Aberystwyth. A paper on a new species of intertidal Ancohenia is being prepared with Lou Kornicker. Stephen is making a study on the effects of a coastal sewer discharge on the ostracods in New Zealand and the results will be presented at the conference on "Applications of Micropalaeontology" in Tel Aviv, and the 97ISO in the UK.

Graeme, Mason Current activities: (1) Compilation of a critical checklist of NZ Cenozoic Ostracoda; (2) Collection of NZ Tertiary sediments likely to reflect seagrass beds and their associated ostracods; (3) Collection of information on SE Asian freshwater ostracods preparatory to the investigation of a number of gatherings from Thailand made this year.

Vicki Passlow I have not been able to do any new research on ostracods. However, I now have two papers in press to Paleo3, which should be published shortly. These deal with Quaternary palaeoceanography of the area off Australia’s southern margin. One specifically looks at trends in ostracods downcore and how they can be applied to palaeoceanographic interpretation. Mike Ayress (and others, including myself) also have a paper in that volume looking at ostracod distribution patterns in the Quaternary over a broader geographic area.

Kerry Swanson continues to work on material collected from the Challenger Plateau in the eastern Tasman Sea. Taxonomic/isotopic/chemical work on one core from that area is nearing completion and work on a second is now well underway. A joint project with Michael Ayress (ANU) on Cytheropteron testudo and related species is presently being written up with a projected completion date of June, 1997. Once that is complete, writing up results from the Tasman Sea Climate Change Project will begin. Kerry also continues to explore the world of Krithe and Cytherella. However, Manawa is a little neglected and in desperate need of counseling...this he will attend to in the not too distant future. He gave a talk to the Marine Science Conference 1996 on "Latest Quaternary dissolution signals from the Challenger Plateau, Tasman Sea"

 

NIGERIA

Correspondent: Constance Moro

Edward Okosun During 1996 I was busy with stratigraphic studies of some formations in Nigeria, resulting in the establishment of hypo and lectostratotypes. I am now working on Neogene foraminifers from the Niger Delta and Cretaceous ostracods from Banue Trough, Nigeria.

Papers in press: (1) Manual on Cretaceous and Tertiary Ostracoda from Nigeria: Zinco Press, Dadima, Nigeria; (2) A note on the Strati graphical value of Buntonia and Protobuntonia in Nigeria, West Africa: Newsletters on Stratigraphy.

 

NORWAY

Correspondent: Ole Bruun Christensen

Ole Bruun Christensen Research and activities on ostracods in Norway are presently low compared to activities on other groups in paleontology and zoology. In the oil industry, Cenozoic and Mesozoic ostracods from wells are recognized or studied currently, and in the universities, teaching in ostracodological subjects and advisory of students on their research projects are common.

Papers in press: A larger report on the regional distributions of 149 Recent species of Ostracoda among more than 5000 other benthonic species along the Norwegian coast will be printed this year (by Lars Hagermann in Torleiv Brattegard and Torleif Holthe, eds.), Direktoratet for Naturforvaltning, Trondheim.

Student: Karianne Storvoll, 1995, Palaeoecological analysis of Late Pliocene ostracode assemblages from Rhodes (Greece), Inst. Geol., Univ. Oslo, Rapport nr. 70 (Cand. Science Thesis in Geology 1994 and 1995).

 

OMAN

Reginald Victor I am still working on Ostracoda among other things. At present I am studying ostracods collected in coastal lagoons, mountain reservoirs, and ground water in the Sultanate of Oman. My work on the taxonomy and biogeography of West African freshwater Ostracoda is also progressing slowly. The most interesting ostracods I studied recently were collected from bromeliads in Jamaica. This material collected by Dr. W. Janetzky during his doctoral work may yield a publication.

 

POLAND

Correspondent: Janina Szczechura

Jarmila Krzyminska continues her work on Quaternary, including Recent, nonmarine ostracodes from the southern Baltic coastal areas of Poland.

Jan Malec is still involved with research on Devonian ostracodes of the Holy Cross Mountains. In addition to the paper published in 1996, he has in press (together with E. Turnau): Conodonts, ostracods, and microspores from the Skaly Beds from Grzegorzowice-Skaly Section (Gory Swietokryskie Mts.): Geological Quarterly.

Tadeusz Namiotko completed his Ph.D. thesis at the beginning of 1996 at the University of Gdansk: "Subfossil and Recent ostracods from profundal of Polish lakes-zoocoenological study". Now he is preparing this elaboration to be published. He is currently dealing with ecology and taxonomy of subfossil and Recent freshwater ostracodes of Europe.

Papers in press: (1) Namiotko, T., Changes in the profundal lacustrine Ostracoda as an indicator of environmental perturbations in Polish lakes undergoing eutrophication: Bull. Cent. Res. Explor.-Prod. Elf Aquitaine; (2) Namiotko, T., On a collection of subfossil and Recent Ostracoda found in deep lake habitats from North-eastern Poland, Rare and little known species: Amber 2; (3) Sywula, T. and Namiotko, T., Ostracoda-Malxoraczki, in Razowski, J., ed., Checklist of animals of Poland, v. 3, Krakow, Ossolineum.

Maria Nehring-Lefeld is generally busy with her routine micropaleontological analyzes for the Geological Survey. She continues her more detailed research concerning Silurian (Pridolian) ostracodes of the southern Baltic.

Ewa Olempska works on (1) Entomozoaceans from Frasnian/Famenian boundary from the Holy Cross Mountains and (2) Early Carboniferous ostracodes from South China.

Jolanta Paruch-Kulczycka continues her studies on the Miocene marine ostracodes of southern Poland (Central Paratethys).

Jerzy Sell is still engaged in his comparative studies on morphology and genetic structures of some selected ostracode species.

Jolanta Smolen is now a curator of the Triassic and Jurassic ostracode collections, examined earlier by Olga Styk and Wanda Bielecka, both working at the Geological Survey in Warszawa. J. Smolen is preparing a monograph on the Upper Jurassic ostracodes and foraminifers, especially their biostratigraphic meaning, from North Poland. Results of her examination of the Upper Jurassic ostracodes, based on the selected boreholes from the Belchatow area, were presented during the 18th Congress on the coal-bearing formations, Kratow, 1995.

Tadeusz Sywula is continuing (in spite of his numerous and different duties) his earlier research.

Janian Szczechura still works on the Middle Miocene ostracodes of the Fore-Carpathian Depression (Central paratethys), mostly their taxonomy, distribution, and origin. Recently found Middle Miocene faunas of the Upper Silesia (SW Poland), containing numerous, so-far-unknown forms, seem to prove the Atlantic Ocean influence into the Central Paratethys. In addition to the papers cited below, she has in press: Distribution of Triebelina raripila and Carinocythereis carinata (Ostracoda) from the Middle Miocene of the Central Paratethys and their paleogeographic implications: J. Micropal.

Janina Sztein is retiring and does not intend to work on ostracodes. In 1996 she published a paper on Jurassic/Cretaceous ostracodes of Poland.

 

 

ROMANIA

Ioan Chintauan continues work on Miocene ostracodes of North-eastern Transylvanian Basin (Romania).

Papers in press: Chintauan, I., A contribution to the study of the Pannonian sequence of the western Calimani Mountains Range: Stud. Cercet. St. Nat., Muz. Bistrita, Bistrita, 3.

Radu Olaru-Florea I am deeply honored that I have the opportunity to contribute once again with data of interest to society of ostracodologists. During the last 10 years I studied the faunas of foraminifers, radiolarians, and ostracods in the Miocene sedimentary deposits from Romania, but the ostracods hold the most important part in my studies. The endemic character of ostracod faunas in the Miocene Peritethysian sedimentary basins generates difficulties in the research, especially as the reference literature issues are few for the central-eastern European area and rather difficult to be obtained. At present I am working for my Ph.D thesis under the guidance of Prof. Theodor Neagu. Bucharest University. The topic dealt with concerns the Miocene ostracod biostratigraphy and paleoecology from the Southern Carpathian foredeep

Marius Stoica In 1987 I graduated the Faculty of Geology from Bucharest University. My student thesis was about Pliocene ostracods from Romania (Dacic Basin). Between 1987-1992 I worked at the Geological Survey in South Carpathians. I plan on publishing a paper on ostracod faunas in the Purbeck and Wealden of Romania. I shall be happy if somebody will contact me for this topic. Now I am at the first steps in this subject, but I hope that in the future to ve more active for Cypris.

Franz-Wilhelm Wanek I work on Tertiary (Paleogene-Quaternary) ostracodes, especially the Pannonian-Pontian brackish fauna of the Paratethys (Taxonomy, stratigraphy, paleoecology). I have published more than 20 scientific papers. Until 1995 I worked as a researcher at Cluj University; after 11/2 years of interruption, beginning in March 1997, I am researcher at the Romanian Geological Survey.

Current work includes (1) Pontian Ostracoda faunas in the Pannonian Basin; (2) Pannonian Ostracoda faunas in the Transylvanian Basin; (3) other local problems of Ostracoda in Lower Miocene and Quaternary from Transylvania; (4) history of Ostracoda research from Transylvania in the 19th century.

Thesis topic: Biostratigraphy on basis of Ostracoda from the Pontian Basin of Lugoj (SW Romania).

 

RUSSIA

Correspondent: Mila Melnikova

Anna Abushik Current research activities include research on Silurian and Lower Devonian ostracods from Severnaya Zemlya and Novaya Zemlya. Some results were presented in International Workshop St. Petersburg, 13-17 February 1997.

Nick Aladin is working on two projects on the Ostracoda of the Caspian and Aral Seas. Together with E. Schornikov and D. Keyser, he is writing a key to the Ostracoda from the Black, Caspian, and Aral Seas. Together with two members of his laboratory, he is writing a book on plankton and benthos of the Aral Sea.

Vladimir Chavtur During 1996 I was busy revising pelagic ostracods of the subfamily Archiconchoecinae. Seven genera and some species were illustrated and described as new. Besides that, I investigated morphology of species of other pelagic subfamilies Euconchoecinae and Halocyprinae from the North Pacific in this period. A new bathyal genus (for Halocyprinae) was established. Many plates with illustrations were made for new and poorly known species of these groups. Now I am finishing writing a series of articles on the Archiconchoecinae. I am also getting ready any articles on Euconchoecinae and Halocyprinae in this year. Three papers were published during 1997, none on ostracodes.

Irina Evdokimova continues work on biostratigraphy and paleoecology of Upper Devonian ostracodes from Main Devonian Field. Some results were represented in 3D Baltic Stratigraphical Conference, 8-12 October 1996, Tallinn.

Current work: Lower Devonian ostracodes (non-leperditicopes) from Severnaya Zemlya and Novaya Zemlya within the IGCP 406 Circum-Arctic Palaeozoic Vertebrates.

Papers in press: Some new data on conodonts, brachiopods, and ostracodes from the stratotypes of the Ilmen and Buregi beds (Frasnian, Main Devonian Field), co-author A. Zhuravlev, E. Sokiran).

Kukhtinov, D. Last year I was working with analysis of data about systematization criteria and composition and stratigraphic distribution of nonmarine Darwinulocopina ostracodes in different facies deposits of the Upper Perm and Trias on different areas in Russia, Kazakhstan, China, and other places. The study results were in part used for a book on ostracodes on the Perm and Trias boundary in continental formations of Volga-Uralian area and in the monograph "Ostracodes and stratigraphy of the Upper Perm on the Pricaspian Depression and adjacent areas".

Mila Melnikova Summary of activities during 1996: (1) Continuing work on the Ordovician ostracodes of East-European Platform (Leningrad District); (2) species of Bradoria ordinata Melnikova, 1983 and Sunella parva Melnikova, 1988 were revised.

Papers in press: (1) Volkhov and Kunda Horizons of the Volkhov River Basin (Leningrad District) and description of trilobites and ostracode complexes, (2) revision of some Cambrian bradoriids (Crustacea) from Siberian Platform.

Elena Michailova continues to study ostracod associations, paleoecology, biostratigraphy of Upper Silurian and Lower Devonian deposits from folded framing of Turan Platform. Some results were presented in the 43rd Session of the All-Russian Paleontological Society.

Irina Neustruevacontinues research on (1) fossil (Paleozoic-Mesozoic) limnic ostracodes of Eurasia; (2) ostracodes from sediments of modern lakes of Ural and Kasakhstan (Uvildy, Balkhach, etc.); (3) taxonomy of fossil Limnocytheracea (Limnocytheridae, Timiriaseviidae, etc.).

Irina Nikolaeva is working on (1) Paleozoic ostracods of the Scyphian and Turanian Plates, and (2) revision of Echinocytherideinae (including Nucleolina and Rabilimis), their evolution succession and phylogentic trends.

N.I. Savina is continuing her research on Devonian ostracodes of the Zapadno-Sibirskaya Plate after completing her Ph.D.

E.I. Schornikov is investigating ostracods in the following topics: (1) monographic research of Paleozoic Bythocytheridae, (2) heterochrony and morphological evolution of ostracodes, (3) Ostracoda-indicators of conditions and dynamics of water ecosystems, (4) Ostracoda of Sea of Japan.

Ekaterina Tesakova is studying Jurassic ostracodes of central parts of the Russian Platform.

V.A. Tchizhova is mainly concerned with Frasnian and Famenian Kloedenellocopina Scott, 1961 from East-European Platform, their taxonomy , phylogeny, systematic relationships, and stratigraphy.

 

SPAIN

Correspondent: Julio Rodriguez Lazaro

Angel Baltanas was mainly involved in tasks related to the EU project "Evolutionary Ecology of Reproductive Modes in Non-marine Ostracods", including short visits to KBIN-IRSNB (with Koen Martens) and School of Earth Sciences-University of Greenwich (with David Horne) plus project meetings held at Bierville and Parma. Because of the heavy rain season in Spain duringthe last year, we have devoted some effort to sampling, which resulted in several new localities with syngamic populations of Eucypris virens. In 1996 we enjoyed the visits of Dr. Walter Geiger (Institut fur Limnologie, Mondsee, Austria) who has been working on competitive interactions between two ostracod species inhabiting shallow saline lakes; and Dr. Nicola Johnson (School of Earth Sciences, Univ. Of Greenwich, UK), who has been recording outlines from a series of populations and lab-reared clones of Limnocythere inopinata (provided by W. Geiger) in order to analyze shape variability in that species.

Three students did visit other labs: Paloma Alcorlo (School of Earth Sciences, Univ. of Greenwich, UK) to work on behavioral ecology of Eucypris virens; Elva Gonzalez-Mozo (KBINIRSNB, Burssels, Belgium) to work on the revision of western European species of the genus Herpetocypris; and Marina Otero (Deparment of Environmental Sciences, Universita di Parma, Italy) to work on life-history traits in clones of E. virens.

Main activities for 1997: finish (and to publish) results from the EU project, which includes: (1) geographical analysis of non-marine ostracod distributions in Europe (with D. Horne, G. Paris); (2) intraspecific shape variability in Eucypris virens (with P. Alcorlo, D.L. Danielopol); (3) intraspecific shape variability in Limnocythere inopinata (with W. Geiger, Y. Yin, N. Johnson); (4) ontogeny of Eucypris virens (with M. Otero, G. Rossetti, V. Rossi); (5) dynamics of a natural population of E. virens (with L. Arqueros).

Jorge Civis Llovera is working on continental ostracodes, Neogene from the Duero and Guadalquivir Basins (Spain).

M. Luz Gonzalez Regalado, Francisco Ruiz Munoz are working on (1) Recent estuarine and shallow marine ostracodes from the Gulf of Cadiz, SW Spain; (2) Miocene and Pliocene marine ostracodes from the Guadalquivir Basin (SW Spain); (3) fresh water ostracodes from the Donana National Park (SW Spain). Future work: correlation analysis between Recent and fossil ostracodes; ostracodes as environmental tools; ostracodes from the outer shelf of the Gulf of Cadiz.

Papers in press: (1) Ruiz, F., Importancia de la bioerosion en ostracodos actueles del litoral de Huelva (SW Espana): Geogaceta 21; (2) Ruiz Munoz, F., Gonzalez Regalado, M.L., and Redondo Sanz, J.L., Guia de fosiles del Sur de la provincia de Huelva, Cap 5, Ostracodos: Servicio de Publicaciones Excma, Diputacion Provincial de Huelva; (3) Ruiz, F., Gonzalez Regaldo, M.L., and Munoz, J., Multivariate analysis applied to total and living fauna: seasonal ecology of recent benthic ostracodes off the North Cadiz Gulf coast (SW Spain): Marine Micropal.; (4) Ruiz Munoz, F., Gonzalez Regalado, M.L., and Munoz Pichardo, J., Analisis de poblaciones en ostracodos: el genero Urocythereis en medios actuales y neogenos del SW de Espana: Geobios; (5) Ruiz, F., Gonzalez Regalado, M.L., Serrano, L., and Toja, J., Ostracodos de las lagunas temporales del Parque Nacional de Donana: Aestuaria, 4.

Rodolfo Gozalo is working on Cambrian and Devonian marine ostracodes from Spain, taxonomy and biostratigraphy.

Francesc Mezquita I Juanes Summary of activity: I am still working on my thesis about distribution and ecology of Recent continental ostracodes in the eastern Iberian Peninsula. Current work in progress: (1) distribution and ecology of ostracods in Iberian springs, with G. Tspis, J.R. Roca; (2) in a polluted river, with J. Rueda, R. Hernandez; both works to be presented at ISO 97; (3) description of a new Cypridopsis sp. , with C. Meisch; (4) lab experiences on the ecology of Herpetocypris species, with G. Wansard, J.R. Roca.

Papers in press: (1) Julia, R., Burjachs, F., Dasi, M.J., Mezquita, F., Miracle, M.R., Roca, J.R., Seret, G., and Vicente, E., Meromixis origin and recent trophic evolution in the Spanish mountain lake La Cruz: Auqatic Sciences; (2) Mezquita, F. and Sanz-Brau, A., New records of the genus Fabaeformiscandona (Fischer, 1851) (Ostracoda) in the Iberian Peninsula: Crustaceana.

Josep R. Roca is working on (1) Late Holocene and Recent ostracods from lacustrine and spring systems, together with Francesc Mezquita; (2) influence of water temperature and chemistry on the calcification process and on the development of several freshwater ostracod species in collaboration with F. Mezquita, Guy Wansard; (3) together with Guy Wansard (University of Lovain) is working within a Belgian Global Change Program partly based on the establishment by means culturing lacustrine ostracods, an accurate relationship between Sr and Mg contents incorporated in the ostracod valves, and the water temperature and chemistry.

Papers in press: (1) Roca, J.R. and Julia, R., Late-glacial and Holocene lacustrine evolution based on ostracode assemblages in southeastern Spain: Geobios; (2) Roca, J.R. and Wansard, G., Temperature influence on development and calcification of Herpetocypris brevicaudata (Ostracoda) under experimental conditions: Hydrobiologia.

Ana Pascual-Cuevas is mainly concerned with Recent and Cretaceous foraminifers from the Basque domain and the Guianas. Current work includes Recent estuarine ostracodes of the rias from Vizcaya coast (N Spain; with J. Rodriguez-Lazaro).

Julio Rodriguez-Lazaro is working on (1) Cenomanian ostracodes and isotopic signals in the Leioa section (Bizkaia); (2) Miocene freshwater and estuarine ostracodes from the Azuara Basin (Zaragoza, Spain) and Pliocene lacustrine ostracodes from Villarroyo (Spain) with P. Anadon, CSIC Barcelona, and other colleagues. Isotopic and trace elements analysis of the ostracodes for hydrological characterization. (3) benthic responses to Cretaceous/Tertiary boundary perturbations in the Pyrenees, with Y. Tambareau and others (to be presented at ISO 97); (4) taxonomy and paleoecology of Quaternary ostracodes from the Little Bahama Bank. The genus Krithe and its potential in palaeoceanography (both with T. Cronin, USGS, Reston and others); (5) Recent estuarine ostracodes from the Ria of Gernika (Bay of Biscay), with A. Pascual.

Maite Martin is beginning a work of Neogene lacustrine ostracodes from the Ebro Basin (N Spain), testing the potential of isotopic analysis of ostracod valves to fine palaeoenvironmental reconstructions in this basin. Supervisor J. Rodriguez Lazaro. Fernando Caballero is currently working with the taxonomy and palaeoecology of Miocene lacustrine ostracodes from Las Bardenas Reales of Navarra. Supervisor J. Rodriguez-Lazaro

Papers in press: (1) Babinot, J.-P., Rodriguez-Lazaro, J., Floquet, M., and Jolet, P., Correlations entre discontinuites sedimentaires majeures et crises biologiques chez les ostracodes du Sud-Ouest de l’Europe au Cenomanien: 2nd European Ostracodologists Meeting, Paris, Bull. Cent. Rech. Explor.-prod. Elf-Aquitaine; (2) Murelaga, X., Cabllero, F., Rodriguez lazaro, J., Astibia, H., and Pereda-Suberbiola, X., Analisis preliminar de los ostracodos del Mioceno Inferior de las Bardenas Reales de Navarra (Cuenca del Ebro): Geogaceta 22; (3) Rodriguez Lazaro, J. and Garcia Zarraga, E., Paleogene deep-marine ostracodes from the Basque Basin (N. Spain): Proc. 2nd European Ostracodologists Meeting, Univ. Glasgow, British Micropal. Soc.; (4) Rodriguez lazaro, J. and Pascual, A., Asociaciones de foraminiferos y ostracodos en el Cenomaniense de Leioa (Cuenca Vasca): Geogaceta 22; (5) Rodriguez Lazaro, J., Robles, F., Martin, M., Anadon, P., Utrilla, R., and Vazquez, A., La sucesion lacustre pliocena de Villarroya (La Rioja): Principales caracteristicas paleoambientales en base a ostracodos y moluscos, Geogaceta 22

Luis Sanchez de Posada is studying (1) Devonian and Carboniferous ostracodes from Spain; global project on Paleozoic basins; (2) taxonomic studies on Kirkbyocopina and Hollinomorpha from the Carboniferous of Leon 9NW Spain); (3) Cambrian ostracodes from the Ossa Morena.

 

SWEDEN

Stefan Majoran Current work in progress includes: (1) the effect of temperature on living marine ostracods cultured in aquaria (with S. Agrenius and Gary Dwyer); (2) palaeoecology of Late Pleistocene ostracods from southern Kattegat during the drainage of the Baltic Ice Lake through the Oresund Strait (with K. Nordberg); (3) palaeoenvironmental aspects of Maastrichtian deep-sea ostracods from the South and Central Atlantic (with J. Widmark and M. Kucera).

Papers in press: (1) Majoran, S., Cytheropterine Ostracoda in view of the palaeoecology of the Palaeogene Port Willunga Formation, South Australia, and the palaeobathymetrical evolution of the Tasman Basin: Geobios; (2) Majoran, S., Widmark, J.G.W., and Kucera, M., Palaeoecological preferences and geographical distribution of Late Maastrichtian deep-sea ostracods in the South Atlantic: Lethaia; (3) Majoran, S., Kucera, M., and Widmark, J.G.W., Maastrichtian Deep-Sea Ostracoda from DSDP/ODP Sites 327, 356, 525, 528, 529, and 698 in the South Atlantic: Revista Espanola de Micropaleontologia.

Stefan Wastegard is a Quaternary scientist holding a postdoctoral research fellow at the Centre for Quaternary Research at Royal Holloway, University of London. My work is mostly concentrated on tephrochronology in deposits from the lat galcial/interglacial transition. My Ph.D thesis, which I defended two years ago at Stockholm University, focused on the marine environment in south-western Sweden during the last glacial/interglacial transition. After that I have worked with calcareous benthic fossils (forams, ostracods) in the Baltic basin, and especially in deposits from a short brackish water phase, "the Yoldia Sea", which followed after the deglaciation of middle Sweden (c. 10,000-9900 C14 years BP). During this short event (only c. 100-300 years), forams, ostracods, and the bivalve Portlandia (Yoldia) arctica colonised the Baltic Sea through straits in middle Sweden. The ostracod assemblage is poor, with only 4 taxa identified so far--Cytheromorpha macchesneyi, Cytheropteron montrosiense, Heterocyprdeis sorbyana, and Paracyprideis fennica. The last species is an endemic species for the Baltic Sea, where it is one of the most common species in low-salinity environments. I will attend the ISO97 in Chatham, where I and a colleague from Stockholm will give an oral presentation on the calcareous fauna of the Yoldia Sea.

Papers in press: S. Wastegard and K. Schoning, Calcareous fossils and radiocarbon dating of the saline phase of the Yoldia Sea stage.

 

TURKEY

Correspondent: Nuran Sonmez-Gokcen

S. Altinsacli Current research: the ostracode fauna and the zoogeographic distribution of Kus (Manyas)Lake, Turkey.

Cem Aygen I am a research assistant and studying the taxonomy of living freshwater ostracods and copepods. I finished my MS thesis entitled "The Freshwater Ostracoda Fauna of Izmir Region" in 1996, but not published yet. These days I am working on a new species (Hungarocypris) for the Turkish freshwater ostracode fauna and identification of freshwater copopods. In 1997 I will start to study a Ph.D thesis on an undecided topic.

V. Bilen Completed research on ostracode biostratigraphy of Kasaba (Kas/Antalya) Neogene Basin; M.Sc. thesis, Supervision Assistant Prof. C. Tunoglu

D. Gulen Current research: Ostracode fauna of the Egridir Lake, Turkey, Tubitak TBAG-AY/122 project.

M. Kilic Current research: the ostracode fauna of the Black Sea coast of Turkey. Ph.D thesis, supervision Prof. D. Gulen

N. Kubanc Current research: The ostracode fauna of the Saros Gulf of Turkey. Ph.D thesis, supervision Prof. D. Gulen

A. Nazik Current research: Ostracod paleontology and environmental characteristics of the Anadoluhisari Quaternary sediments; the influence of the environmental changes on the Recent and fossil shells; the Seyhan Delta.

G. Ogrunc Completed research on micropalaeontology and environmental analysis of the northern Yenice, Tarsus. M.Sc. thesis, supervision Assoc. Prof. A. Nazik.

O. Ozulug Current research: Thrakian Recent ostracodes. Ph.D thesis, supervision Prof. D. Gulen.

H. Sari Current research: Number and shape evaluation of the ostracode chromosomes, Terkos Lake samples, Turkey. Ph.D. thesis, supervision Assoc. Prof. G. Ulakoglu

N. Sonmez-Gokcen Completed research on Chronostratigraphy and environment of the volcano-sediments of the northern coastal parts of western Anatolia. Current research on the palaeontological age determination in the ostracode-bearing volcano-sediments of the final volcanism of northwestern Anatolia.

C. Tunoglu Current research: Paratethys influence areas along the eastern Black Sea coast of Turkey, TUBITAK TBAG-CAG/133 no. Project. According to ostracode association, Tethys and Paratethys interaction areas at the interglacial period of Lower-Middle Pleistocene in the Gelibolu Peninsula, NW Turkey (to be presented at the International Symposium on the Late Quaternary in the eastern Mediterranean, MTA General Directorat, 1-4 April 1997, Ankara). Water pollution according to vertical and horizontal distribution of recent Ostracoda association in the Marmara Sea (to be presented to the International Symposium on Geology and Environment, Spet. 1-5, 1997, Istanbul).

A. Unal Completed research: ostracode biostratigrpahy of the Neogene sequence in Gelibolu Peninsula, Research Foundation of Hacettepe University, Project No. 94.01.010.008

 

UNITED STATES

Correspondent: Pamela Borne

Pam Borne is wrapping up her dissertation this fall on Pliocene/Pleistocene ostracodes from the Limon Basin of Costa Rica under the direction of Joe Hazel and Tom Cronin. She is also working with Joan Bernhard (Wadsworth Center, NY) and Barun Sen Gupta (LSU) on benthic forams and ostracodes of the Santa Barbara Basin, California.

Papers in press: Borne, P.F., Cronin, T.M., and Hazel, J.E., Neogene-Quaternary Ostracoda and paleoenvironments of the Limon Basin, Costa Rica and Bocas del Toro Basin, Panama, in Marine Biodiversity of Neogene Southern Central America, Part 1, Caribbean, L.C. Collins and A.G. Coates, eds.

William M. Briggs Jr. I continue to work in collaboration with Tom Cronin on the Late Quaternary paleoceanography and paleoclimatology of the western Arctic Ocean.

Papers in press: Briggs, W.M., Jr., Axelheibergella (Ostracoda, Crustacea), a new genus of marginally septate cladocopid ostracods from the Central Arctic Ocean: Journal of Micropalaeontology, 16(2).

Elisabeth Brouwers is working on (1) Eocene-Miocene ostracode assemblages from the subsurface of southern Florida, and (2) modern nonmarine ostracode assemblages from abandoned mine lands, southern Colorado. In progress work includes (1) Miocene-Pleistocene ostracodes from Abu Dhabi, (2) Paleocene-Oligocene ostracode assemblages from Pakistan, (3) Eocene-Miocene ostracodes from Oregon and Washington, (4) Pliocene ostracodes from the Imperial Valley, California.

Claire Carter This past year I have continued my work with Rick Forester on the environmental science team of the U.S. Geological Survey’s Yucca Mountain Project. The work included identifying and counting valves from two drill cores of Owens lake sediments in support of Forester’s paleoclimate studies.

Anne Cohen may move to the San Francisco Bay region later in 1997, but plans to continue research on myodocopid ostracodes, particularly bioluminescent cypridinids (with Jim Morin and Lisa Torres) wherever she is. After moving, she will post her new address on Ostracon.

Current work in progress: (1) "Homology of ostracode appendages with those of other crustaceans: the protopod, epipod, exopod, and endopod", Anne Cohen, Jody Martin, Louis Kornicker (nearly completed); (2) "Two new bioluminscent ostracod genera (Myodocopida, Cypridinidae) with three new species from the Caribbean", Jim Morin and Anne Cohen (mostly completed); (3) manuscript describing two new species from Belize: a bioluminescent signaling cypridinid ostracode and associated nicothoid copepod, by Elizabeth Torres and Anne Cohen (completed); (4) manuscript describing two new species from Belize: a bioluminescent signaling cypridinid ostracode and associated nicothoid copepod, by Elizabeth Torres and James Morin (completed); (5) "Phylogeny of the Cypridinidae and evolution of bioluminescence within the family", by Anne Cohen and James Morin (nearing completion); (6) genetic diversity in Skogsbergia lerneri: evidence for multiple sibling species within a widely ditributed marine ostracode, by Elizabeth Torres (nearly completed).

Papers in press: (1) Cohen, A.C. and Morin, J.G., External anatomy of the female genital (eighth) limbs and the setose openings in myodocopid ostracodes (Cypridinidae): Acta Zoologica (Stockholm); (2) Cohen, A.C., Kornicker, L.S., and Iliffe, T.M., Jimmorinia, a new genus of myodocopid Ostracoda (Cypridinidae) with two new species from the Bahamas, Jamaica, Honduras, and San Blas Islands, Panama: Smithsonian contributions to Zoology.

Thomas Cronin I have been on temporary assignment to the Office of Science and Technology, Executive Office of the President, Washington, D.C., dealing with policy issues on climate change, global warming, biodiversity, and other issues. I have published papers in Geology and Nature, among other journals. I continue research on Chesapeake Bay faunas and Holocene history and trace element work with Gary Dwyer and tropical studies with Pam Borne.

Brandon Curry I am beginning work with archeologists at the University of Illinois on an investigation of the Holocene oxbow lake records from the American Bottoms near St. Louis. Using ostracodes, I hope to find geochemical or autecological evidence for why several ancient civilizations abruptly left the area. I am also examining other Wisconsinan interstadial and Holocene lacustrine records from the western Great lakes region. I continue to work with Sangamonian terrestrial interglacial ostracodes, and hope to come up with a much-needed Sangamonian record from central Wisconsin this summer with colleagues from the Wisconsin Geological Survey. Work is in progress with Emi Ito (University of Minnesota) on the isotopic "vital effects" of Cypridopsis vidua, Physocypria globula, and Potamocypris smaragdina. Emi, her student, Juanjuan Xia, and other colleagues have published two papers in Geochemica et Cosmochemica Acta having to do with the geochemistry of Candona rawsoni valves.

The highlight of 1996 was an outstanding field trip led by Jim Teller (University of Manitoba) that showed off the sediment and geomorphology of Lake Agassiz. I am an adjunct thesis committee member for Jason Mann, a student of Jim’s, who is investigating ostracodes (among other things) in lagoonal deposits associated with Glacial lake Agassiz.

Papers in press: (1) Curry, B.B., Diversion of the Mississippi River at about 20.35 ka and its effect on lacustrine and wetland environments at Lomax, Illinois: Geol. Soc. Amer., Abstracts with programs, North-Central Section; (2) Curry, B.B., Anderson, T.F., and Lohmann, K.C., Unusual stable isotope (C,O) values of ostracodal calcite from Sangamonian lacustrine sediment, Raymond Basin, Illinois: Jour. Paleolimnology; (3) Curry, B.B., Paleochemistry of Lakes Agassiz and Manitoba based on ostracodes: Canadian Jour. Earth Sciences.

Ken Finger is currently working with an environmental company in southern California as a county certified paleontologist. Microfossils are of little concern. Primary efforts involve salvaging vertebrate fossils uncovered during construction activities. Some independent consulting on ostracode-bearing samples seems to come my way now and then.

Richard Forester My research on ostracodes during 1996 focused on completing the work on the Owens Lake cores and on paleo-spring and wetland deposits in southern Nevada. Both sets of studies are in collaboration with Claire Carter and include taxonomic as well as paleoenvironmental reconstructions. Although, as is true for many of us these days, much of my time was spent on administrative tasks, leaving us little time for research activities.

I continue to serve on the dissertation committee of Saxon E. Sharpe (hydrological and hydrochemical sensitivity of aquatic gastropods and their isotopic characteristics) at the University of Nevada, Reno, NV. Saxon’s initial results suggest that, like ostracodes, aquatic gastropod distributions are defined by the solute composition as well as the salinity (total dissolved solids) of their environments.

Papers in press: Forester, R.M. and Whelan, J.F., Ostracodes and stable carbon and oxygen isotope proxies for paleohydrology and paleoclimate: The past as a key to the present, in a multiauthored chapter by Shanley, J.B., Kendall, C., Pendall, E., Stevens, L.R., Michel, R.L., Phillips, P.J., Forester, R.M., Naftz, D.L., Liu, B., Stern, L., Wolfe, B.B., Chamberlain, P., Leavitt, S.W., Heaton, T., Mayer, B., Cecil, L.D., Lyons, W.B., Katz, B.G., Betancourt, J., McKnight, D.M., Blum, J.D., Edwards, T.W.D., Houe, H.R., Ito, E., Aravena, R., and Whelan, J.F., Isotopes as indicators of environmental change, in Kendall, C. and McDonnell, J.J., Isotope Tracers in Catchment Hydrology, Chapter 23, Elsevier.

Joseph Hazel made preparations to work on K/T ostracodes from the western Gulf Coastal Plain. Worked with Andrei Tudoran on his dissertation, which was successfully defended this April. Worked with Pam Borne on her Pliocene to Holocene ostracodes from the western Caribbean region. I am organizing a large collection of Middle Cretaceous ostracodes from Texas. Pam Borne and I have a paper in Paleo3, and Andrei and I have one in review with the Journal of Micropaleontology.

Jaren Horsley I have retired recently from my position as Curator of Invertebrates at the National Zoo. I am hoping I will have more time to devote to the Philomedidae, a project I have delayed for far too long. I continue as a Research Associate at the Smithsonian Institution and can be reached via email as follows: jhorsley@sivm.si.edu

Emi Ito is working on monthly monitoring of Cypridopsis vidua, Potamocypris smaragdina, and Physocypria globula and water at Kaufman Lake, Champaign, Illinois (with Brandon Curry). I am responsible for the water and valve chemistry (including isotopes). Work is resuming after one year’s hiatus. I have in press a paper with Alison Smith and D. Engstrom on the ostracode assemblage, valve geochemistry, and hydrologic modeling of a prairie lake during the middle Holocene.

Roger L. Kaesler Summary of activity: I continue to devote much of my time to these tasks and positions: (1) Director, The University of Kansas Paleontological Institute, (2) Curator-in-Charge, Division of Invertebrate Paleontology of the University of Kansas Natural History Museum and Biodiversity Research Center, (3) teaching geology and paleontology courses to undergraduate and graduate students, including our summer course in field geology, (4) Treasurer, International Palaeontological Association, (5) editing the Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology and The University of Kansas Paleontological Contributions. I have also just become an associate editor of Palaeontologica Electronica. In addition, staff members of the Paleo Institute and I are hard at work on PaleoBank, a relational database for invertebrate paleontology.

Current work in progress: I expect to spend much of my free time until May preparing two papers for the ISO-97 meeting in Chatham.

Papers in press: (1) The first of these two papers uses ostracodes as an example. Kaesler, R.L., Phase angles, harmonic distance, and the analysis of form, in P.E. Lestrel, ed., Fourier Descriptors and their Applications in Biology: Cambridge University Press, New York, (2) Hageman and Kaesler, Wall structure and growth of fusulinacean foraminifera: Jour. Paleontology.

Students: George D. Hecht, my doctoral student, is on leave of absence from his doctoral program.

Robert V. Kesling Back in 1951 (the Stone Age of ostracodology), I published "Morphology of Ostracod Molt Stages" in "Illinois Biological Monographs". Whereas the title is rather misleading (I was young then), it was, I believe, the pioneer work in serial-sectioning ostracods. Recently I obtained two copies of this book. Is anyone interested? My address: 1941 Geddes Ave., Ann Arbor, MI 48104, telephone 313-663-1380.

About a year ago I visited with my former student, Sabeekah Al Abdul-Razzaq, and her family in Geneva, where she is the Kuwaiti representative to the United Nations. Her husband, Kazem Behbehani, has charge of tropical disease control for World Health and her two charming daughters attend school in Geneva.

If anybody wonders what a long-retired professor of ostracods is now doing, I write the monthly "unsolved" mysteries for Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine. I hope to celebrate my 80th birthday this September by salmon fishing on Resurrection Bay in Alaska.

Larry Knox I am currently working on: (1) the paleoecology of nonmarine (brackish) ostracodes from the Devonian of New York State. I will report on this work at ISO97; (2) the paleoecology of ostracodes from Waulsortian-like mud mounds of Tennessee, Kentucky, and Mississippi; (3) continuing work on ostracodes from Midcontinent Pennsylvanian cyclothems.

Paul R. Krutak My most recent work on ostracodes was published in 1994. I also co-wrote a Memoriam on Van Morkhoven. I have a grant request into the National Science Foundation: Krutak, P.R., 1996, "Morphological Adaptations of Ostracoda to Epiphytic/Epibenthic Microhabitats, Eastern Yucatan Shelf, Mexico". I plan to investigate living ostracode faunas at both Xel-Ha and Akumal, Quintana Roo, Mexico. The work will be done in conjunction with the Instituto de Ciencias del Mar y Limnologia at UNAM in Mexico City. Their Director, Dr. Antonio Pena-Diaz, has kindly invited me to use their branch station facilities at Puerto Moreles. The arrangements were facilitated with the cooperation of Dra. Maria Machain-Castillo, Secretaria Academica (Dean) of the Institute of Oceanography and Limnology at UNAM. Dra. Machain-Castillo is, of course, an alumna of LSU. Vim Vandenbold was her Major Professor.

Forams ‘98 will be held in Monterrey, Nuevo Leon during June, 1998, and is expected to attract more than 100 international researchers on the Foraminifera. I have volunteered to co-lead (with Jose Longoria and Marta Gamper) a pre-meeting field trip to the classic Tertiary localities in the Tampico-Misantla Basin. Many of these were sampled indirectly by Joseph Cushman (he actually had others do the sampling) and W. Storrs-Cole in the early 1920s, and contain topotype material of many marker foraminiferal and ostracodal species that are used widely in Gulf Coast and Caribbean (as well as world-wide) correlation.

Another note about ostracodes and forams mainly--I will give a series of guest lectures and seminars at KORDI (Korean Oceanographic Research Division, Ansan, P.O. Box 29, Seoul 425-600, Korea) on Feb. 24-28). Two LSU alumni, Drs. Hi-Il Yi and Im Chul Shin, arranged the visit for me. I taught both of them as graduate students at the University of Nebraska in the early 1980s. They are both alumna of LSU also. My talks at KORDI will center on the ecology of modern ostracodes from the northeast Yucatan Shelf of Mexico and the Veracruz-Anton Lizardo reefs in the Gulf of Mexico. I will also give a series of seminars on hydrocarbon accumulation in Colorado (Codell-Juana Lopez Sandstones), Alaska (Lisburne Group-Permocarboniferous), and Louisiana (Heterostegina Zone carbonates).

Michael Arthur (Penn State) and I co-chaired a Theme Session at the recent GSA meeting in Denver: "Cretaceous of the Western Interior Seaway, North America, Parts 1 and 2". I gave a technical paper in this session and organized a field trip, which was published in CD-ROM form.

Mervin Kontrovitz Taphonomy of ostracodes and foraminifers, including transport, diagenesis, shell strength, and color (transport with D.M. Gore). Ostracodes and agricultural practices; ocular structures; use of rare species in environmental interpretations (both with J.M. Slack and R.L. Kaesler); ostracodes at archaeological sites (with J.M. Slack and M.J. Henry).

Papers in press: (1) Kontrovitz, M., Ocular shell structures in podocopid Ostracoda, in Enrico Savazzi, ed., Functional Morphology of the Invertebrate Skeleton, John Wiley and Sons; (2) Kontrovitz, M. and Puckett, T.M., Ocular shell structures in some Cretaceous trachyleberid Ostracoda: Micropaleontology; (3) Henry, M.J., Kontrovitz, M., and Slack, J.M.

Student and thesis topics: Diagenesis, transport, shell strength.

Louis S. Kornicker Current work includes (1) Late Permian Myodocopida (with I.G. Sohn); (2) description of a new myodocopid genus (Cypridinidae) from the Bahamas and Caribbean (with A.C. Cohen and T.M. Iliffe); (3) Myodocopid ostracodes from the Bahamas, Bermuda, and Mexico (with T.M. Iliffe).

Papers in press: (1) Late Permian thaumatocyprids from Greece (with I.G. Sohn); (2) Anchialine thaumatocyprids and cladocopids from Mexico, Canary islands, and the Bahamas (with T.M. Iliffe); (3) Myodocopid Ostracoda from Madagascar (with B.A. Thomassin); and (4) Myodocopid Ostracoda from Half Moon Bay, California.

Okan Kulkoyluoglu is a Ph.D. student at the University of Nevada, Reno. He is interested in freshwater Ostracoda that he has been collecting samples in Nevada for his thesis. He has one paper in review (Limnologica) and three in preparation. One paper describes the bisexual form of Cavernocypris subterranea, the others are the results of a preliminary study on Ostracoda in Nevada, Oregon, and Idaho. His thesis topic is "Taxonomy, ecology and biogeographic distribution of spring dwelling Ostracoda (Crustacea) in Nevada". His thesis will also include ostracod evolution (phylogeny) and statistical analyzes.

Kenneth Lister does not study ostracodes. His current work is environmental geology, involving investigations for hazardous substances and remediation of sites containing these substances.

Robert Lundin Summary of activity: (1) continuing work with Harry Birkmann on shape analysis of non-palaeocope ostracodes from Gotland, (2) work with Elena Michailova on some Silurian non-palaeocope ostracodes from Central Asia and their affinities to North American forms, (3) work with Roger Schallreuter on some Ordovician pachydomellids, (4) work with Colin Sumrall on an Upper Carboniferous ostracode fauna from Arizona, (5) work with Gerhard Becker on an Early Devonian kirkbyacean, and (6) work with David Siveter on various aspects of the Treatise revision.

Current work in progress: (1) Report with Gerry Friedman of the earliest unequivocal freshwater ostracodes from the Devonian of New York. Although the specimens are not magnificently preserved, it is clear that they are leperditicopes. They are almost certainly isochilinids and questionably placed in Sollenella sp. The ostracodes are from a meandering stream facies in the Catskill complex of eastern New York. The geology of the occurrence precludes any marine influence on the sediments of the deposit. (2) Lee Petersen and I are continuing the description of non-palaeocope ostracodes from the British Wenlockian.

Papers in press: (1) Friedman, G.M. and Lundin, R.F., Fresh-water ostracodes from upper middle Devonian fluvial facies, Catskill Mountains, New York: J. Paleontology.

Students: Harry Birkmann, Confocal microscopy and shape analysis, morphology, systematics, and biostratigraphy of nonpalaeocope ostracodes from the Silurian of Gotland.

James Morin has moved to Cornell University, where he is a faculty member in the Section of Ecology and Systematics (=E&S), and the Bartels Director of the Shoals Marine Laboratory.

Students and thesis topics: Elizabeth Torres, 1997, Molecular systematics and taxonomy of Cypridinid ostracodes: Patterns and evolution of bioluminescence and liminescent courtship behavior, Unpublished Ph.D dissertation, University of California at Los Angeles, 163 pages.

Lisa Park is a new faculty member at the University of Akron. She took over Jim Teeter’s position in fall, 1995, having done a dissertation at the University of Arizona with Andy Cohen, looking at an ostracode genus in Lake Tanganyika.

Summary of activity: This year I initiated a field project in Eritrea and in Panaca, Nevada. I am currently working on several projects invilving lacustrine ostracodes, particularly with respect to their role as paleoenvironmental indicators. I am also involved in taxonomic work and phylogenetic assessment of an ostracode subclade from Lake Tanganyika.

Current work in progress: (1) Eritrea--My colleague, Kevin Downing (DePaul University) and I collected ostracodes and gastropods from the Miocene age Red Series Strata in the Danakil Depressio, n of Eritrea. We will be using the ostracode assemblages to reconstruct paleoenvironmental conditions during this critical time in hominid evolution. (2) Lake Tanganyika--I will be publishing a paper describing four new species of members of the genus Gomphocythere, with Koen Martens (Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences). In addition, I will be presenting a paper at ICAL (International Conference on Ancient Lakes) in Japan on speciation in ancient lakes, based upon my phylogenetic work on the Gomphocythere clade in Africa. (3) Bahamas--My undergraduate student, Michele Zimmer, received a GSA Undergraduate Student Research Award to do a project entitled "Paleoenvironmental analysis of a tropical lacustrine ostracode fauna, Lee Stocking Island, Bahamas". This research was conducted in conjunction with George Dix and Tim Patterson (Department of Earth Sciences, Carleton University, Ontario) and will be presented as a poster session at the North-Central GSA in Madison. Our work involves determining the Mg/Ca ratios of Cyprideis americana through a vibracore that has been radiometrically dated and analyzed for forams and oxygen isotopes. (4) Panaca, Nevada--I participated in a project looking a small mammal faunas in the Panaca Basin in Nevada. I collected ostracodes from some of the lacustrine units within these Miocene-Pliocene age deposits and will be comparing them to ostracodes from similar age deposits and environments throughout the Great Basin.

Students and thesis topics: Joshua C. Whipple, Geological and Environmental Assessment of Mentor Marsh, Mentor, Ohio. Josh will be assessing the impact of remediation efforts on this fresh-water marsh, using ostracodes as proxy indicators for water geochemistry.

Mark Puckett Since I have been in the Hydrogeology Division of the Geological Survey of Alabama, my research activities with ostracodes have been seriously curtailed. I generated a database on every scrap of information on Mesozoic ostracodes of North America I could find, with the long-term goal of determining the relationship between the evolution of the ostracode faunas and the North American continent. There is much to be done, and it has only begun.

I have an article in the Journal of Micropalaeontology due out any day on the genus Krithe from the Upper Cretaceous of Alabama. I am currently working on an article on the global significance of the late Campanian Globotruncanita calcarata planktonic foram zone.

Robert M. Ross In March 1997, Robert Ross moved from Shizuoka University in Japan, where he enjoyed 4 ½ years on the Faculty of Science, to the Paleontological Research Institution in Ithaca, NY, USA.

In February he had two students finish theses, one on modern littoral ostracodes from the coast of Queensland (M. Yamakoshi) ans onw on tropical algal microhabitats (using material from NW Australia and Okinawa (R. Suzuki). One of the interesting findings of the latter project was large and diverse living faunas on benthic macroalgae that had been uprooted after storms. The work on Australian ostracodes is part of a large survey project with Noriyuki Ikeya and Katsumi Abe on Australian littoral faunas and their relationships to Japanese faunas.

A project on the biogeography of faunas from the Ryukyu and Bonin (Ogasawara) Islands, with Ryuichi Tabuki and Tsuyoshi Yoshioka, continues.

Another student did a small thesis project on the latitudinal diversity gradient of shallow (< 100 m) marine ostracodes from the western Pacific (northern Japan to southern Australia), based on data from literature. A latitudinal gradient was not perfectly evident at either alpha (single sample) or beta (regional) levels; this same lack of a gradient occurred in Yamakoshi’s study of faunas along the coast of Queensland from Cooktown to Brisbane. Though such literature surveys have many problems, in organisms for which a strong diversity gradient exists, the gradient tends to be obvious even if the data is biased and incomplete. I would be very interested to hear opinions as to whether shallow marine ostracodes do indeed show latitudinal diversity gradients. He is working on the ecology of modern Krithe from Sagami Bay off the Pacific coast of Honshu.

Alison Smith I am continuing my research in the area of Holocene climate change and groundwater-surface water interactions. These projects include drought history of the Great Plains, lake level history of Lake Huron, hydrologic study of local Ohio fens, and a detailed study of a group of lakes in western Minnesota. All of these projects involve the study and use of nonmarine ostracodes as hydrochemical and hydrologic indicators. The collection of modern North American ostracodes and their associated hydrochemistry and climate data continues, in a collaborative effort with other ostracode workers Rick Forester (USGS) and Brandon Curry (Illinois Geological Survey).

My graduate students are working on a variety of projects involving the use of ostracodes as paleolimnologic and hydrologic tools. John Carney is looking at the distribution of ostracodes and associated hydrochemistry and isotopic geochemistry in the streams and springs on the Edwards Plateau, Texas. Basia Mastyjasik is working on the Holocene paleolimnology of Rice Lake, ND using ostracodes, in order to reconstruct the drought history. Dana Oleskiewicz is doing a seasonal study of ostracode life cycles in a lake in Ohio, and Jody Puller is working on a study of the nonmarine ostracodes in the wetlands in Puget Sound, Washington.

Papers in press: (1) Smith, A.J., Donovan, J.J., Ito, E., and Engstrom, D.R., Ground water processes controlling a prairie lake’s response to middle Holocene drought: Geology; (2) Vance, R.E., Last, W.M., and Smith, A.J., Hydrologic and climatic implications of a multidisciplinary study of late Holocene sediment from Kenosee Lake, southeastern Saskatchewan, Canada: J. Paleolimnology.

Sohn, I.G. Is presently continuing work with L.S. Kornicker on the description of Permian ostracodes from Greece.

Frederick Swain I am continuing to work on fossil Ostracoda at a reduced rate.

John R. Tillman Work in progress: ostracodes of the Superfamilies Kirkbyacea, Aparchitacea, and Kloedenellacea from Middle Devonian rocks of central Ohio.

Papers in press: Phylum Arthropoda, Class Crustacea, Subclass Ostracoda, in Fossils of Ohio: Ohio Division of Geological Survey, Bulletin 70.

Elizabeth Torres completed her Ph.D at UCLA and is now a post-doctoral fellow at the American Museum (two-year NSF Fellowship with R. De Salle). She is studying the molecular evolution of the luciferase gene of cypridinids.

Andrei Tudoran defended his doctoral dissertation in April, 1997, focusing on the biostratigraphic, paleoenvironmental, and paleobiogeographic significance of Jurassic foraminifers and ostracodes from Romania. One of the papers that are part of the dissertation, concerning Toarcian foraminifers and ostracodes of the Northern Apuseni Mountains, has already been submitted for publication in the Journal of Micropaleontology. I plan to submit for publication during 1997 the other five related papers. I am currently working on a study concerning the Lower Cretaceous ostracodes of Southern Dobrogea (Romania). I hope to find the time for an investigation of Triassic ostracodes from Northern Dobrogea, Romania.

My address will change in July, as I will begin working for Exxon Exploration Company in Houston. Although my work will not be directly concerned with micropaleontology, and will try to stay in touch with ostracod studies.

Donald S. Van Nieuwenhuise I am presently engaged in a number of projects in West Africa including offshore Gabon and Angola, pre-salt and post-salt ostracodes. In addition to the ostracode work, I am also integrating palynological, nannofossil, and foraminiferal data to build pre- and post-salt composite standards. I have also been working on the recalibration of the stratigraphy for the Valhall Field, Upper Cretaceous Chalks, with Paul Sikora (foraminifers), James Bergen (nannofossils), and Joe Hazel (geochronology). I am also recalibrating Amoco’s North Sea Lower and Middle Jurassic standard, which relies heavily on ostracode datums, with Paul Milner (palynology, Amoco Norway) to develop revised stratigraphic standards. I have also been working on Lower Cretaceous and Upper Jurassic ostracodes from wells from onshore Louisiana and offshore Canada.

Carlos Alvarez Zarikian My research during 1996 focused on the study of fossil and living ostracods and benthic forams on the southwest coast of Florida as indicators of natural and anthropogenic effects in the Everglades-Florida Bay ecosystem. This study is part of my Ph.D dissertation at the University of Miami Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science. During 1996-97 I also finished my Master’s thesis titled "Ostracode assemblages from the Louisiana inner continental shelf: impact of low-oxygen bottom-waters and other physico-chemical parameters". I presented such work at the Ocean Sciences ASLO-AGU meeting in San Diego, California in February 1996.

 

YUGOSLAVIA

Correspondent: Ljupko Rundic

Nada Krstic got the O.E.T. Status for the IGCP Project 329, to finish publishing some maps and the final volume of the project. Therefore she is devoting the attention to regional geology and only little to ostracodes, as much as they could help in understanding different types of the lacustrine environment. A visit to Albania helped to outline the third lake system, the "Drim Lake", being spread from Kosova area in Yugoslavia over Peshkopia-Debar depression on eastern Albania. And, maybe, over Korca in southern Albania to northwestern Greece (to the south-southeast of Kastoria and then to the north to Ptolemais) and from Bitola to Prilep in FYR Macedonia. The prolongation of the lake to north and northeast in the direction of Vranje (Yugoslavia) and Sofia (Bulgaria) is highly questionable. The ostracodes in the alek are of freshwater type, in places with signs of slightly saline water (Amnicythere in Metohija), mostly fully freshwater as in the area of Mzgos-Stanjevci (close to sofia). More brackish ostracodes are collected from the Pliocene of Locride (central Greece), where, along with Neglecandona, Ilyocypris, and Limnocythere there are Cyprideis, Maeotocythere, and Loxoconcha. The connection of Locride to the above outlined lake is questionable and for Sofia must be supposed a deep gulf penetrating in the land from the transgressive Pliocene sea and housing some Limnocardidae of Pontian type (such ostracodes are not yet found in Sofia surroundings).

Ljupko Rundic Current research includes: (1) Upper Miocene caspibrackish ostracodes of Serbia (Ph.D thesis); (2) marine and freshwater ostracodes from Neogene (Middle and Upper Miocene) of Yugoslavia and NE Bosnia; (3) biostratigraphy, paleoecology, and paleobiology of the genus Hemicytheria Pokorny; (4) breaks in sedimentation in the Neogene based on ostracodes.

 

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