ostracod

noun

os·​tra·​cod ˈä-strə-ˌkäd How to pronounce ostracod (audio)
variants or less commonly ostracode
: any of a subclass (Ostracoda) of very small aquatic crustaceans that have the body enclosed in a bivalve carapace, the body segmentation obscured, the abdomen rudimentary, and only seven pairs of appendages

Examples of ostracod in a Sentence

Recent Examples on the Web
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Hong Kong has found many plant and animal fossils, including ostracod and ammonite fossils from about 400 to 190 million years ago, but this is the first time dinosaur fossils have been unearthed in the city, the handout said. Peter Guo, NBC News, 24 Oct. 2024 Most of them appeared to be ostracods, a small crustacean that remains common today (there are 13,000 existing ostracod species). John Timmer, Ars Technica, 27 Sep. 2023 The creatures behind the eerie Panamanian light show are called ostracods. Elizabeth Anne Brown, New York Times, 29 Nov. 2023 So there’s branchiopods, ostracods, copepods, cladocerans...and besides the crustaceans, there’s a lot more. Christopher Intagliata, Scientific American, 3 May 2023 The ostracod – and countless other small fossils – cannot be seen adequately using microscopes, however, so their mineral tomb has to be gradually ground away and the fossil recreated with 3-D digital imaging. Liam Herringshaw, Discover Magazine, 27 July 2015 Ghoulish in appearance, creatures like this ostracod have thrived for millennia as little more than floating heads. Discover Magazine, 17 Nov. 2016 Discovered in a ditch near the Anglo-Welsh border in the early 2000s, a fossilized ostracod, or seed shrimp, proved to be quite clearly male. Liam Herringshaw, Discover Magazine, 27 July 2015 Bioluminescent ostracod crustaceans, like tiny fireflies of the sea, have a gland that makes their bioluminescent goo. Quanta Magazine, 16 Aug. 2021

Word History

Etymology

from the base of New Latin Ostracoda, neuter plural, borrowed from Greek ostrakṓdēs "like an earthern pot (of a crab shell), testaceous," from óstrakon "earthen vessel, potsherd" + -ōdēs "having the qualities of" (originally, "smelling of," s-stem adjective from the base of ózein "to smell, give off an odor," as in anthemṓdēs "smelling like flowers" > "flowery, blooming") — more at ostracon, odor

First Known Use

1865, in the meaning defined above

Time Traveler
The first known use of ostracod was in 1865

Dictionary Entries Near ostracod

Cite this Entry

“Ostracod.” Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/ostracod. Accessed 24 Nov. 2024.

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