Field Museum
PEET - Bivalves
Project Summary
Project Summary
Participants
Products and Links
Publications
Field Workshops and Symposia
Outreach
What is PEET?
Acknowledgments


Bivalves - Research, Training, Electronic Dissemination of Data

A joint program based at the Field Museum of Natural History and the American Museum of Natural History, project dates 1999-2004 (with some aspects extending through 2008), lead by principal investigators Drs. Rüdiger Bieler (FMNH) and Paula M. Mikkelsen (AMNH, now Paleontological Research Institution, Ithaca, New York).

For our current bivalve research project, see BivAToL — Assembling the Bivalve Tree of Life.

Please address comments about these web pages to PEET-Bivalves@fieldmuseum.org

Taxonomy on the half-shell: a "PEET" project investigating marine bivalves (1999-2008)

Bivalvia (= Lamellibranchia, Pelecypoda) is a group of great living and fossil diversity, and one of immense economic importance. At the start of this grant, there were few biologists specializing in investigating bivalve diversity and the largest (and ecologically as well as economically most important) bivalves were among the least understood. In a joint program involving biologists and laboratories from the around the world, Drs. Rüdiger Bieler and Paula M. Mikkelsen, molluscan systematists at the Field Museum of Natural History and the American Museum of Natural History, respectively, combined their expertise to train a new generation of bivalve workers and significantly to advance the systematics of the group. The research concentrated on the marine family Veneridae, a group of bivalves with more than 500 living species that form a key component in the world's clam fisheries, and included projects on other Recent bivalve groups as well. The project trained students at the graduate and postdoctoral levels and involved a wide range of approaches and techniques ranging from field collecting and comparative anatomical studies to DNA sequencing. Other educational efforts targeted undergraduate trainees and various audiences that can be reached through web publications and museum programming. Promoting bivalve research worldwide has been an important goal of the project. To make information about the species and associated data available to specialists and non-specialists alike, various bivalve databases and images were developed for electronic web dissemination.

Projects: Affiliated Projects:
Venerinae Florida Keys Bivalve Diversity
Pterioidea Pearls
Isognomon
Veneroidea Phylogeny
Siphonal Structure in Veneridae
Bivalve Sperm Ultrastructure










Continue to Projects: Venerinae >>






Project Summary | Participants | Products and Links | Publications | Field Workshops and Symposia |
Outreach | What is PEET? | Acknowledgments


© 2008 The Field Museum, All Rights Reserved
1400 S. Lake Shore Dr, Chicago, IL 60605-2496
312.922.9410

Copyright Information | Linking Policy

Technical Support
webmaster@fieldmuseum.org