(Redirected from Ostracoda)
'Ostracoda' is a
class of the
Crustacea, sometimes known as the 'seed shrimp' because of their appearance. Some 50,000 extinct and extant species have been identified, grouped into several orders.
Ostracods are small crustaceans, typically around one mm in size, but varying between 0.2 to 30 mm, laterally compressed and protected by a
bivalve-like,
chitinous or calcareous valve or "shell". The hinge of the two valves is in the upper, dorsal region of the body.
Ecologically ostracods can be part of the
zooplankton, or (most commonly) they are part of the
benthos, living on or inside the upper layer of the sea floor. Many ostracods are also found in fresh water and some are known from humid continental forest soils.
Fossils
Ostracods have a long and well-documented
fossil record from the
Cambrian to the present day. An outline
microfaunal zonal scheme based on both
foraminifera and ostracoda was compiled by
M. B. Hart (1972).
Ostracods have been particularly useful for the
biozonation of marine strata on a local or regional scale, and they are invaluable indicators of paleo-environments because of their widespread occurrence, small size, easily-preservable generally-moulted calcified bivalve carapaces, the valves are a commonly found microfossil.
Morphology
The body of an ostracod is encased by two valves, which together form the duplicature. A distinction is made between the valve (hard parts) and the body with its appendages (soft parts).
Soft parts and ontogeny

Anatomy of ''Cypridina mediterranea''
The body consists of a cephalon (head), separated from the
thorax by a slight constriction. The
segmentation is unclear. The
abdomen is regressed or absent whereas the adult
gonads are relatively large. There are 5-8 pairs of appendages. The
branchial plates are responsible for oxygenation.
During the
ontogeny the
epidermis (containing
mesodermal tissue)
invaginates ventrolaterally near the cephalon/thorax area. This invagination proceeds upwards and tailwards, until the whole animal is enveloped by a double tissue layer on both sides: this forms the duplicature. The dorsal region never becomes invaginated, and is called the isthmus. The mesodermal tissue in the duplicature develops into the vestibulum. The vestibulum makes contact with the body near the isthmus. It plays a role in oxygenation. In paleo-ecology, the size of the vestibulum can be cautiously interpreted as an environmental indicator. The two double tissue layers surrounding the animal each have an inner and an outer lamella, which surrounds the vestibulum. These lamellae are surrounded by a chitinous
cuticle, that is secreted by the epidermal cells.
Like all
arthropods, ostracods develop
discontinually. Before reaching maturity 8
larval stages (
instars) are passed.
Hard parts
The epidermal cells may also secrete
calcium carbonate after the chitinous layer is formed, resulting in a chalk layer enveloped by chitin. This calcification is not equally pronounced in all orders. During every instar transition, the old carapace (chitinous and calcified) is rejected and a new, larger is formed and calcified. The outer lamella calcifies completely, while the inner lamella calcifies partially, with the rest remaining chitinous. The partial inner lamella calcification occurs when the ostracod becomes adult. The partial inner lamella calcification is most strongly developed frontally (see electron micrograph). The marginal zone is the area where inner and outer lamella meet, and includes part of the vestibulum. The edge of the marginal zone is called the fused zone, and in this area inner and outer lamella join. The fused zone can contain marginal pore canals. These, along with non-marginal pore canals (that are dispersed evenly along the ostracod's valve) connect the vestibulum to the outer world. The line of concrescence is the visible line between the vestibulum and the fused zone. In many cases, this line is wavering and follows the marginal pore canals. On the inner lamella, a selvage may be present.
External link
★
Introduction to Ostracoda
Key to the two subclasses: http://home.comcast.net/~fireflea2/OstracodeKeyindex.html
International Research Group on Ostracoda: http://www.uh.edu/~rmaddock/IRGO/irgohome.html