'' The body of an ostracod is encased by a carapace originating from the head region, and consists of two valves superficially resembling the shell of a clam. A distinction is made between the valve (hard parts) and the body with its appendages (soft parts). Studies of the embryonic development in
Myodocopida show that the bivalved carapace develops from two independent buds of the carapace valves. As the two halves grow, they meet in the middle. In
Manawa, an ostracod in the order
Palaeocopida, the carapace originates as a single element and during growth folds at the midline.
Body parts The body consists of a head and
thorax, separated by a slight constriction. Unlike many other crustaceans, the body is not clearly divided into
segments. Most species have completely or partly lost their trunk segmentation, and there are no boundaries between the thorax and
abdomen, and it has therefore been impossible to tell if the first pair of limbs after the maxillae belongs to the head or the thorax. With a few exceptions, like
platycopids which have an 11-segmented trunk, the abdomen in ostracods has no visible segments. The head is the largest part of the body, and bears four pairs of appendages. Two pairs of well-developed
antennae are used to swim through the water. In addition, there are a pair of
mandibles and a pair of
maxillae. The thorax has three primary pairs of appendages. The first of these has different functions in different groups. It can be used for feeding (
Cypridoidea) or for walking (
Cytheroidea), and in some species it has evolved into a male clasping organ. The second pair is mainly used for locomotion, and the third is used for walking or cleaning, but can also be reduced or absent. Both the second and third pair are absent in suborder
Cladocopina. In the
Myodocopina the third pair is a multisegmented cleaning organ that resembles a worm. Their external genitals seem to originate from the fusion of three to five appendages. The two "rami", or projections, from the tip of the tail point downward and slightly forward from the rear of the shell. All ostracods have a pair of "ventilatory appendages" that beat rhythmically, which create a water current between the body and the inner surface of the carapace.
Podocopa, the largest subclass, have no gills,
heart or circulatory system, so the gas exchange take place all over the surface. The other subclass of ostracods, the Myodocopa, do have a heart, and the family
Cylindroleberididae also have 6–8 lamellar gills. Certain other larger members of Myodocopa, even if they don't have gills, have a circulatory system where hemolymph sinuses absorbs oxygen through special areas on the inner wall of the carapace. In addition, the respiratory protein
hemocyanin has been found in the two orders Myodocopida and Platycopida. Nitrogenous waste is excreted through glands on the maxillae, antennae, or both. The order
Halocyprida in the same subclass is eyeless. Podocopid ostracods have just a
naupliar eye consisting of two lateral ocelli and a single ventral ocellus, but the ventral one is absent in some species. Platycopida was assumed to be completely eyeless, but two species,
Keijcyoidea infralittoralis and
Cytherella sordida, have been found to both possess a nauplius eye too. ==Palaeoclimatic reconstruction==