Abstract:
Ostracods are one of the best documented groups within the whole of the
animal kingdom, due to the most characteristic features of their bodies and a well
calcified, tiny, bivalved carapace which fossilizes easily. They are known to inhabit a
wide variety of aquatic environments such as marine, brackish, freshwater, even
terrestrial, and also dwell as parasites in the intestines of fishes. The studies on Recent
ostracod fauna from the seas and other marine marginal water bodies of India,
especially along the east coast, are still not known fully. For the first time a study on the
systematics of Recent Ostracoda from the Mullipallam creek, India. The present work
on morphological studies of Recent Ostracoda from the Mullipallam creek,
(Lat.l0°18'093" - 10°20710" N and Long. 078°30,840" - 79°34'876" E) has been
undertaken to enhance the existing knowledge on ostracods of east coast of India. The
Mullipallam creek area is located near Muthupet, belonging to Nagapattinam and
Thiruvarur Districts of Tamil Nadu. The area of investigation is a marshy mangrove
wetland located in the southernmost end of the Cauvery delta along the coastal zone of
Bay of Bengal and Palk Straits, India. Mangrove wetlands found along the coastal zones
and often dominate in estuarine and the inter-tidal zones which act as a barrier against
cyclones and tsunamis protect coastal erosion and provide good nursery ground for a
number of commercially important aquatic organisms. A mangrove species Avicennia
marina is the dominant in the creek followed by Acanthus ilicifolius, Egiceras
corniculatum, Excoecaria agallocha and Rhizopora mucronata. The Muthupet mangrove
wetland area is drained by the distrbutaries of the Cauvery viz., Paminiyar, Koraiyar,
Kandankurichanar, Kilathangiyar and Marakkakoraiyar and forms a large lagoon before
reaching the sea.
A fieldwork has been carried out twice in a year representing Pre monsoon
(June, 2006) and Post monsoon (Jan, 2007). The depth of sample collection ranges from
1.0 mts to 3.5 mts. A total of forty-eight sediment samples were collected with the help
of Van veen grab and by using motor boat from the selected sites of the study area. The
classification proposed by Hartmann and Puri (1974) has been followed in the present
study, through which 35 ostracod taxa belonging to 24 genera, 17 families, 2
superfamilies and 2 suborder of the order Podocopida have been identifed. Bass lerites
liebaui, Jankeijcythere mckenziei, Kalingella mckenziei, Neomonoceratina jaini are
endemic to Indian waters only. Neomonoceratina iniqua is recorded in all the samples
collected and studied. It outnumbered the entire ostracod population and represented by
above 90% of the total population in few samples. Hemicytheridea paiki is represented
second to N. iniqua in the study area. Some ostracod species characteristic of brackish
water such as Hemicytheridea and Neosinocythere dekrooni occur in the creek. The
occurrence of Cytherelloidea leroyi, Keijella reticulate and Neocytheretta murilineata,
may be due to the tidal influence. All the species are well preserved. In general, the
recorded ostracod assemblage is strongly of tropical, shallow and brackish water habitat
in nature.