The International Bryozoology Association was founded in May 1965 in
Stockholm,
Sweden. The first
conference was held in August 1968 in
Milan,
Italy.[2]
Since then the IBA's conferences have been held every three years in a different city:
1st Conference: 1968,
Milan, Italy (Proceedings published 1968[3])
2nd Conference: 1971,
Durham, UK (Proceedings published 1973[4])
3rd Conference: 1974,
Lyon, France (Proceedings published 1975[5])
4th Conference: 1977,
Woods Hole, MA, US (Proceedings published 1979[6])
5th Conference: 1980, Durham, UK (Proceedings published 1981[7])
6th Conference: 1983,
Vienna, Austria (Proceedings published 1985[8])
7th Conference: 1986,
Bellingham, Washington, US (Proceedings published 1987[9])
8th Conference: 1989,
Paris, France (Proceedings published 1991[10])
9th Conference: 1992,
Swansea, UK (Proceedings published 1994[11])
10th Conference: 1995,
Wellington, New Zealand (proceedings published 1996[12])
11th Conference: 1998,
Panama (Proceedings published 2000[13])
12th Conference: 2001,
Dublin, Ireland (Proceedings published 2002[14])
13th Conference: 2004,
Concepción, Chile (Proceedings published 2005[15])
14th Conference: 2007,
Boone, NC, US (proceedings published 2008[16])
15th Conference: 2010,
Kiel, Germany (Proceedings published 2012[17])
16th Conference: 2013,
Catania, Italy (Proceedings published 2014[18])
^Cheetham, Alan H (2002). "The founding and early history of the International Bryozoology Association, 1965–1974". Annals of Bryozoology. Colour Books, Dublin. pp. 45–57.
^Annoscia, E., 1968. Proceedings of the First International Conference on Bryozoa. Atti della Societa di Scienze Naturalia del Museo Civico di Storia Naturale di Milano. Vol. 108, Milano.
^Larwood, G.P., 1973. Living and Fossil Bryozoa. Recent Advances in Research. Academic Press, London and New York.
^Pouyet, S., 1975. Bryozoa 1974. Proceedings of the Third Conference. International Bryozoology Association. Documents des Laboratoires de Geologie de la Faculte des Sciences de Lyon, HS 3 (fasc. 1,2). Universite Claude Bernard, Lyon.
^Larwood, G.P., & Abbott, M.B., 1979. Advances in Bryozoology. Academic Press, London. (The Systematics Association, Special Volume No.13)
^Ross, J.R.P. 1987. Bryozoa: Present and Past. Western Washington University Press, Bellingham.
^Bigey, F.P., 1991. Bryozoaires Actuels et Fossiles. Bulletin de la Société des Sciences Naturelles de l'Ouest de la France, Mémoire HS 1, Nantes.
^Hayward, P.J., Ryland, J.S. & Taylor, P.D., 1994. Biology and Palaeobiology of Bryozoans. Olsen & Olsen, Fredensborg.
^Gordon, D. P., Smith, A. M., & Grant-Mackie, J. A. (1996). Bryozoans in Space and Time: Proceedings of the 10th International Bryozoology Conference, Victoria University of Wellington, Wellington, New Zealand, 1995. Niwa.
^Herrera Cubilla, A. & Jackson, Jeremy B.C., 2000. 11th International Bryozoology Association Conference. Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Balboa, R.P.
^Moyano G., Hugo I., Cancino, Juan M. Wyse Jackson, 2005.
Bryozoan Studies 2004. A.A. Balkema Publishers, Leiden, London, New York, Philadelphia, Singapore.
^Hageman, S. J., Key Jr, M. M., & Winston, J. E. (2008). Bryozoan Studies 2007: Proceedings of the 14th International Bryozoology Association Conference, Boone, North Carolina, July 1–8, 2007.
^Ernst, A., Schäfer, P., & Scholz, J. (Eds.). (2012). Bryozoan Studies 2010 (Vol. 143). Springer Science & Business Media.
^Rosso, A, Wyse Jackson, P. N. & Porter, J. (Eds.). (2012) Bryozoan Studies 2013: . Bryozoan Studies 2010: Proceedings of the 16th International Bryozoology Association Conference. Studi Trentini di Scienze Naturali Vol. 94