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Who we are 

The Larval Biology Society began as the project of Jane Weinstock and Kharis Schrage while they were graduate students at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in Woods Hole, Massachusetts, USA. Jane and Kharis both study invertebrate larvae and larval dispersal, and they felt the absence of an academic society dedicated specifically to these fields. Chasing down fellow larval researchers at conferences proved akin to sampling larvae from a vast water column. So, Jane and Kharis have set out to concentrate their fellow larval biologists in one place -- the Larval Biology Society (LBS).

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LBS now has a board of 11 larval biologists, all working hard to organize the 2026 Larval Biology Symposium and establish infrastructure for the continued success of the Larval Society. Meet the team here

Origin of the Larval Biology Symposium

The larval biology meetings started in 1993 as a biennial forum for work on the ecology and evolutionary biology of larval stages (or propagules) of all aquatic organisms. Since then, meetings have taken place every 2-5 years, and they have featured larval biologists from across the globe. Our hope is to renew the tradition of these meetings, reinvigorate our community, and gather again at future symposia.

Past meetings

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1993          Port Jefferson, NY, USA

1995          Fort Pierce, FL, USA

1998          Melbourne, Australia

2000         Santa Cruz, CA, USA

2002         Vigo, Spain

2004         Hong Kong, China

2006         Coos Bay, OR, USA

2008        
Lisbon, Portugal

2010         Wellington, NZ

2012         Berkeley, CA, USA

2017         Honolulu, HI, USA

2019         Melbourne, Australia - canceled

2022        San Diego, CA, USA - joint with Larval Fish Conference

2026        Woods Hole, MA, USA

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Last updated: 25 March 2026

Logo by Marta Duda

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