et al. (2007) analysed the content of the 15 first ISO proceedings and grouped the 906 papers published in the various proceeding volumes (in stand-alone books and in journals) into several categories. Biostratigraphy and (palaeo-) ecology have always constituted strong components in this series of proceedings, and this inspired the organisers of the ISO16 to determine biostratigraphy and applied ecology as the main themes of their symposium.The 16th International Symposium on Ostracoda was held in Brasilia, Brazil, between 26 and 30 July 2009. The scientific communities from 25 different countries had representatives among the 107 participants, who brought to the meeting an amount of 102 contributions: 46 oral communications, 52 poster presentations and four keynote lectures given by invited speakers. The present proceedings volume comprises ten papers, a small selection of these contributions, and will serve as a legacy to the memory of this highly successful event. As always, the communication of scientific results is of prime importance, but the personal contacts with distant colleagues often leads to fertilisation of ideas and to successful collaborations. The ISO16 meeting scored on both accounts! Furthermore, by holding an ISO for the first time in South America, we hope to have helped foster ostracodology on this continent. In spite of the emphasis given in the current version of the symposium to biostratigraphy and applied ecology, contributions comprised also other research lines, such as Taxonomy, Morphology, Biogeography, Systematics and Evolution. In terms of geological time, the present proceedings contain six papers on Recent faunas, one on Tertiary, two on Mesozoic and one on Palaeozoic Ostracoda. The papers in this volume are loosely organised to follow this chronological sequence.The volume opens with the paper by Decrouy et al. (this volume), who studied the Sediment Penetration Depth of epi-and infaunal ostracods in the Swiss Lake Geneva. The relevance of this paper is clear: ostracods have to moult 8-9 times during their development and each time have to calcify their valves using chemical