Charles
Lydeard, Elizabeth K. Shea, and Amanda Lawless
The American
Malacological Society recently held its 83rd annual meeting this
past July at Clayton Hall of the University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware. The meeting was hosted by AMS President Liz
Shea of the Delaware Museum of Natural History.
The formal meeting was preceded with a workshop organized by Petra
Sierwald, Rüdiger Bieler, Gary Rosenberg and Liz Shea and sponsored by an
iDigBIo Conference Award entitled Digitizing
the 2nd largest Invertebrate Phylum: Mollusks. The meeting kicked off with the President’s
Symposium, which continued along with the workshop theme Mollusk research in a
digital world: creating, integrating and mining large datasets and had
presentations by Bieler et al., Rosenberg and Khoo, Vendetti et al, Zigler, and
Vecchione. José Leal organized a
symposium entitled Mollusks in Peril and Heather Judkins organized one entitled
Cephalopod Biodiversity. The meeting had
nearly 100 registered participants and the talks were all well attended
including sessions on biodiversity with several presentations including one on
malacology underground by Gladstone et al.; Phylogeny & Systematics with
several presentations including one by Graf; Mollusk Collections with one by
Callomon; Dispersal, Feeding Strategies, and Historical Ecology. The evenings were also terrific opportunities
to continue interacting with friends and colleagues including the reception at
Stone Balloon on Main Street, an Auction, and an excellent cookout, which was
held at the Delaware Museum of Natural History.
Field excursion opportunities also were provided for those who were able
to stay the day after the meetings. All
in all, it was a terrific meeting and a great time for all.
If you couldn’t make
this meeting, perhaps you can go next year when, the meeting will be hosted by
AMS President 2017-2018, Norine Yeung of the Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum in
Hawaii. See you there!
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