Kanishka Bose

@iitb.ac.in

Post Doctoral Fellow
Indian Institute of Technology Bombay

Kanishka Bose

EDUCATION

Ph. D. (Sc.) in Geology, August 2017- August 2023 (Provisional Ph. D. Degree
awarded on 21.08.2023) – awarded by the University of Calcutta (Indian Statistical
Institute, Kolkata).
Title of the Ph. D. Thesis: Systematics, Diversity, Palaeobiogeography, and
Palaeoecology of Miocene gastropods of Dwarka Basin, Gujarat, India.
Supervisor: Dr. Shiladri Shekhar Das, Geological Studies Unit, Indian Statistical
Institute, Kolkata.

RESEARCH, TEACHING, or OTHER INTERESTS

Paleontology, Geology, Animal Science and Zoology, Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
12

Scopus Publications

33

Scholar Citations

3

Scholar h-index

1

Scholar i10-index

Scopus Publications

  • Revised generic characterization of the Late Cretaceous pleurotomariid gastropods (Family Pleurotomariidae Swainson, 1840) with new records from the Cauvery Basin, southern India
    Sayak Ghosh, Kanishka Bose, Shiladri S. Das, Ritesh K. Bera
    Cretaceous Research, 2026
  • New records of Nautiloidea from the lower Eocene marine succession of the Jaisalmer Basin, western India, and their environmental implications
    Adrisuta Ghosh, Kanishka Bose, Shiladri S. Das
    Palaeoworld, 2026
  • Biostratigraphy, mineralogy and paleoenvironmental analysis of the Miocene Gaj Formation from the Dwarka Basin, western India
    Swagata Chaudhuri, Kanishka Bose, Koustav Chattopadhyay, Shiladri S. Das, Ajoy K. Bhaumik
    Geological Magazine, 2025
    The Dwarka Basin in the Kathiawar Peninsula, western margin of the Indian subcontinent, offers crucial insights into marine sedimentation processes and faunal evolution during the Miocene epoch. This research employs a combination of biostratigraphy, microfacies analysis and geochemical data to examine the Gaj Formation, a major stratigraphic unit of the Dwarka Basin, with the aim of reconstructing the paleoclimatic and depositional conditions. Foraminiferal biostratigraphy suggests that the Gaj Formation ranges from the Aquitanian to the Langhian stage, with the intermediate Burdigalian stage comprising most of the succession. Microfacies analysis reveals that the formation was primarily deposited in shelf environments, influenced by regional tectonic and climatic factors. The fossil assemblages and morphological adaptations observed in foraminiferal shells provide clear evidence of the Middle Miocene Climatic Optimum (MMCO). Climate-driven global warming during this climatic phase caused morphological evolution (e.g., dwarfism) and decreased faunal diversity in response to environmental stress. This study also aims to reconcile discrepancies in stratigraphic classification in the basin through lithostratigraphic data and high-resolution faunal analyses. Results highlight the dynamic nature of marine depositional environments as impacted by global sea-level changes, regional tectonics and climatic fluctuations. The study foregrounds the importance of multi-proxy analyses in reconstructing complex depositional histories and Miocene climatic transitions and their effects on regional marine ecosystems.
  • A diverse early Miocene (Burdigalian) turritelline-dominated gastropod assemblage from the Dwarka Basin of Kathiawar Peninsula, western India
    Kanishka Bose, Shiladri Shekhar Das, Subhronil Mondal, Swagata Chaudhuri
    Journal of Paleontology, 2025
    A diverse early Miocene (Burdigalian) turritelline-dominated assemblage (TDA) is documented from a single bed of the Nandana Member of the Gaj Formation, Dwarka Basin, western India. This study reports 42 gastropod species, including the description of four new species: ? Clelandella saurashtraensis n. sp., Jujubinus dwarkaensis n. sp., Cerithium bardhani n. sp., and Nassarius anisi n. sp. In addition, 30 species are discussed under open nomenclature. The TDA assemblage is notable for the high diversity among turritelline gastropods, with eight species identified across two genera, Turritella and Haustator. Petrographic studies and the foraminifera associations of Lockhartia sp., Miogypsina sp., Operculina sp., Quinqueloculina sp., and Ammonia sp., along with other foraminiferal groups such as nodosariids, milliolids, and rotalids, suggest that the TDA bed was deposited in tropical, warm, nutrient-rich, well-oxygenated conditions in subtidal–intertidal conditions. UUID: http://zoobank.org/a12f5cac-1293-40c3-b0fb-a0147d657514
  • A new species of Talantodiscus (Family Pleurotomariidae Swainson, 1840) from the Late Jurassic of the Kutch, Western India
    Sandip Saha, Shiladri S. Das, Subhronil Mondal, Kanishka Bose
    Journal of the Geological Society of India, 2024
    Talantodiscus is a rare genus within the pleurotomariid gastropods represented by only seven species from nine different Mesozoic localities of New Zealand and Europe, appearing from the late Middle Triassic (Late Ladinian) to the Middle Jurassic (Bajocian) in the fossil record. In the present paper, we report a new species, i.e., Talantodiscus gujaratensis, from the topmost Tithonian bed of the Kutch Basin, western India. The new find extends the palaeobiogeographic range of the genus to the western India beside New Zealand and European localities. Also, the last appearance datum (LAD) of the genus is extended to the latest of the Jurassic (Tithonian).
  • Global palaeobiogeographic distribution patterns of the Cenozoic pleurotomariid gastropods (Family: Pleurotomariidae Swainson, 1840)
    Kanishka Bose, Shiladri S. Das, Subhronil Mondal
    Palaeobiodiversity and Palaeoenvironments, 2024
  • Erratum: Miocene Stromboid Gastropods (Superfamily Stromboidea Rafinesque, 1815) from the Dwarka Basin, Western India and their Paleobiogeographic Implications (JOURNAL GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF INDIA Vol.99, November 2023, pp.1491-1507, https://doi.org/10.1007/s12594-023-2501-z)
    Kanishka Bose, Shiladri S. Das, Sandip Saha
    Journal of the Geological Society of India, 2024
  • Miocene Stromboid Gastropods (Superfamily Stromboidea Rafinesque, 1815) from the Dwarka Basin, Western India and their Paleobiogeographic Implications
    Kanishka Bose, Shiladri S. Das, Sandip Saha
    Journal of the Geological Society of India, 2023
  • Morphological conservatism of the family Naticidae (Gastropoda) through time: Potential causes and consequences
    Neha Sharma, Subhronil Mondal, Shiladri S. Das, Kanishka Bose, Sandip Saha
    Paleobiology, 2021
    Taxonomic status of several members of the family Naticidae is extremely vague because of its simple shell morphology. Conventional taxonomic classification schemes suggest that most of the morphological characters tend to be homoplastic and exhibit convergence. Such morphological convergence complicates naticid taxonomy and makes it difficult to understand the evolutionary history of this group; several unrelated taxa are often misidentified as naticids, thereby exaggerating the actual diversity of this group. Here, we employ a standard landmark-based approach to understand the pattern of morphological evolution of this family. Ordination methods such as principal components analysis and canonical variate analysis were used to create morphospaces, and disparity was quantified using variance and range. Our results reveal that when naticids are compared with their sister taxon, Ampullinidae, the two families show significant differences in their average shapes, despite their superficial resemblances. Among naticids, although the mean shapes of the individual subfamilies are different, overall, the family Naticidae has displayed extreme morphological conservatism from the Jurassic to the Holocene. Interestingly, this conservatism has been unaffected by taxonomic changes—neither the extinction of the subfamily Gyrodinae nor the appearance of the subfamily Sininae affected this morphological conservatism. Naticids have always shown strong ecological preference toward an infaunal mode of life and strict behavioral selectivity in handling and preying upon infaunal organisms, and this ecological and behavioral conservatism could have enabled them to diversify without undergoing a change in their basic Bauplan.
  • An updated generic classification of Cenozoic pleurotomariid gastropods, with new records from the Oligocene and early Miocene of India
    Kanishka Bose, Shiladri S. Das, Subhronil Mondal
    Journal of Paleontology, 2021
    Although taxonomically distinct, the Cenozoic pleurotomariids are the bottlenecked remnants of the Mesozoic members of the family in terms of morphology, with only conical forms surviving the end-Cretaceous mass extinction. Here, we propose an updated classification scheme for the Cenozoic representatives of this group, based on data from the entire Cenozoic pleurotomariid fossil record. We consider all conventional as well as several new characters so that this scheme can readily help to distinguish Cenozoic pleurotomariid genera. Following the new classification scheme, a revision of the generic status of Cenozoic species previously assigned to ‘Pleurotomaria’ Defrance, 1826 is presented.Only a few Cenozoic pleurotomariid gastropods have been reported from the Indian subcontinent. Here we report four species from the Oligocene of the Kutch Basin and the early Miocene (Burdigalian) of the Dwarka Basin of Gujarat, western India, of which two are described as new: Perotrochus bermotiensis n. sp., Entemnotrochus kathiawarensis n. sp., Entemnotrochus cf. E. bianconii, and Entemnotrochus? sp. 1.UUID: http://zoobank.org/89b6ff67-2834-477f-862b-67691104aca4
  • Substrate-controlled naticid gastropod drilling predation on recent barnacles from Chandipur, India and its Palaeontological implications
    Subhronil Mondal, Akash Maitra, Kanishka Bose, Pritha Goswami, Subhendu Bardhan, et al.
    Historical Biology, 2021
  • Observation on the life habits of windowpane oyster Placuna placenta from Gujarat
    Indian Journal of Geosciences, 2020

RECENT SCHOLAR PUBLICATIONS

  • Revised generic characterization of the Late Cretaceous Pleurotomariid Gastropods (Family Pleurotomariidae Swainson, 1840) with new records from the Cauvery Basin, southern India
    S Ghosh, K Bose, SS Das, RK Bera
    Cretaceous Research, 106337 , 2026
    2026
  • New records of Nautiloidea from the lower Eocene marine succession of the Jaisalmer Basin, western India, and their environmental implications
    A Ghosh, K Bose, SS Das
    Palaeoworld, 201046 , 2025
    2025
  • A diverse early Miocene (Burdigalian) turritelline-dominated gastropod assemblage from the Dwarka Basin of Kathiawar Peninsula, western India
    K Bose, SS Das, S Mondal, S Chaudhuri
    Journal of Paleontology 99 (6), 1303-1344 , 2025
    2025
  • Biostratigraphy, mineralogy and paleoenvironmental analysis of the Miocene Gaj Formation from the Dwarka Basin, western India
    S Chaudhuri, K Bose, K Chattopadhyay, SS Das, AK Bhaumik
    Geological Magazine 162, e49 , 2025
    2025
    Citations: 1
  • A new species of Talantodiscus (Family Pleurotomariidae ) from the Late Jurassic of the Kutch, Western India
    S Saha, S S. Das, S Mondal, K Bose
    Journal of the Geological Society of India 100 (12), 1765-1772 , 2024
    2024
    Citations: 2
  • Global palaeobiogeographic distribution patterns of the Cenozoic pleurotomariid gastropods (Family: Pleurotomariidae Swainson, 1840)
    K Bose, SS Das, S Mondal
    Palaeobiodiversity and palaeoenvironments, 115-130 , 2024
    2024
    Citations: 2
  • Erratum: Miocene Stromboid Gastropods (Superfamily Stromboidea Rafinesque, 1815) from the Dwarka Basin, Western India and their Paleobiogeographic Implications
    K Bose, SS Das, S Saha
    Journal of the Geological Society of India 100 (2), 303-303 , 2024
    2024
  • Miocene stromboid gastropods (superfamily Stromboidea Rafinesque, 1815) from the Dwarka Basin, Western India and their Paleobiogeographic implications
    K Bose, SS Das, S Saha
    Journal of the Geological Society of India 99 (11), 1491-1507 , 2023
    2023
    Citations: 3
  • Morphological conservatism of the family Naticidae (Gastropoda) through time: potential causes and consequences
    N Sharma, S Mondal, SS Das, K Bose, S Saha
    Paleobiology 47 (3), 487-502 , 2021
    2021
    Citations: 5
  • Substrate-controlled naticid gastropod drilling predation on recent barnacles from Chandipur, India and its Palaeontological implications
    S Mondal, A Maitra, K Bose, P Goswami, S Bardhan, S Mallick
    Historical Biology 33 (7), 1029-1042 , 2021
    2021
    Citations: 10
  • An updated generic classification of Cenozoic pleurotomariid gastropods, with new records from the Oligocene and early Miocene of India
    K Bose, SS Das, S Mondal
    Journal of Paleontology 95 (4), 763-776 , 2021
    2021
    Citations: 8
  • Two giant gastropods from the Miocene of Dwarka Basin, Gujarat, India and their paleobiogeographic implications.
    S Bose, K., Das, S. S., Saha
    BSIP NECLIME Conference on Neogene climate evolution and biotic response(s … , 2021
    2021
  • The role of western Indian pleurotomariid gastropods in changing migration patterns of the family during the Cenozoic.
    S Bose, K., Das, S. S., Mondal
    2nd CPEG meeting- Crossing the Palaeontological-Ecological Gap, Berlin, 2021, 16 , 2021
    2021
  • Taxonomic and Ecological Diversity of Miocene Gastropods of the Dwarka Basin, Western India.
    SS Bose, K., Das
    5th International Meeting of Early-stage Researchers in Palaeontology … , 2021
    2021
  • Observation on the life habits of windowpane oyster from Gujarat
    S Mondal, K Bose, SS Das
    Indian Journal of Geosciences 74 (2), 183-186 , 2020
    2020
    Citations: 2
  • Status of Gastropod diversity pattern of three basins of Indian subcontinent during Miocene reviewed.
    P Das, S. S., Bose, K., Goswami
    Deep Time Biodiversity of Bengal, An Outreach Programme, Indian Statistical … , 2020
    2020
  • Discrimination of the Holocene subfamilies of the Family Naticidae: A geometric morphometrics approach.
    S Sharma, N., Mondal, S., Das, S. S., Bose, K., Saha
    3rd National Geo-Research Scholars Meet, WIHG, Dehradun, India., 19-20 , 2019
    2019
  • Geometrical analysis of Shell Coiling in Gastropoda: A Reappraisal of Theoretical and Empirical Approaches through time.
    K Bose
    Geo-Symposium Jadavpur University, Kolkata, India., 7 , 2018
    2018

MOST CITED SCHOLAR PUBLICATIONS

  • Substrate-controlled naticid gastropod drilling predation on recent barnacles from Chandipur, India and its Palaeontological implications
    S Mondal, A Maitra, K Bose, P Goswami, S Bardhan, S Mallick
    Historical Biology 33 (7), 1029-1042 , 2021
    2021
    Citations: 10
  • An updated generic classification of Cenozoic pleurotomariid gastropods, with new records from the Oligocene and early Miocene of India
    K Bose, SS Das, S Mondal
    Journal of Paleontology 95 (4), 763-776 , 2021
    2021
    Citations: 8
  • Morphological conservatism of the family Naticidae (Gastropoda) through time: potential causes and consequences
    N Sharma, S Mondal, SS Das, K Bose, S Saha
    Paleobiology 47 (3), 487-502 , 2021
    2021
    Citations: 5
  • Miocene stromboid gastropods (superfamily Stromboidea Rafinesque, 1815) from the Dwarka Basin, Western India and their Paleobiogeographic implications
    K Bose, SS Das, S Saha
    Journal of the Geological Society of India 99 (11), 1491-1507 , 2023
    2023
    Citations: 3
  • A new species of Talantodiscus (Family Pleurotomariidae ) from the Late Jurassic of the Kutch, Western India
    S Saha, S S. Das, S Mondal, K Bose
    Journal of the Geological Society of India 100 (12), 1765-1772 , 2024
    2024
    Citations: 2
  • Global palaeobiogeographic distribution patterns of the Cenozoic pleurotomariid gastropods (Family: Pleurotomariidae Swainson, 1840)
    K Bose, SS Das, S Mondal
    Palaeobiodiversity and palaeoenvironments, 115-130 , 2024
    2024
    Citations: 2
  • Observation on the life habits of windowpane oyster from Gujarat
    S Mondal, K Bose, SS Das
    Indian Journal of Geosciences 74 (2), 183-186 , 2020
    2020
    Citations: 2
  • Biostratigraphy, mineralogy and paleoenvironmental analysis of the Miocene Gaj Formation from the Dwarka Basin, western India
    S Chaudhuri, K Bose, K Chattopadhyay, SS Das, AK Bhaumik
    Geological Magazine 162, e49 , 2025
    2025
    Citations: 1
  • Revised generic characterization of the Late Cretaceous Pleurotomariid Gastropods (Family Pleurotomariidae Swainson, 1840) with new records from the Cauvery Basin, southern India
    S Ghosh, K Bose, SS Das, RK Bera
    Cretaceous Research, 106337 , 2026
    2026
  • New records of Nautiloidea from the lower Eocene marine succession of the Jaisalmer Basin, western India, and their environmental implications
    A Ghosh, K Bose, SS Das
    Palaeoworld, 201046 , 2025
    2025
  • A diverse early Miocene (Burdigalian) turritelline-dominated gastropod assemblage from the Dwarka Basin of Kathiawar Peninsula, western India
    K Bose, SS Das, S Mondal, S Chaudhuri
    Journal of Paleontology 99 (6), 1303-1344 , 2025
    2025
  • Erratum: Miocene Stromboid Gastropods (Superfamily Stromboidea Rafinesque, 1815) from the Dwarka Basin, Western India and their Paleobiogeographic Implications
    K Bose, SS Das, S Saha
    Journal of the Geological Society of India 100 (2), 303-303 , 2024
    2024
  • Two giant gastropods from the Miocene of Dwarka Basin, Gujarat, India and their paleobiogeographic implications.
    S Bose, K., Das, S. S., Saha
    BSIP NECLIME Conference on Neogene climate evolution and biotic response(s … , 2021
    2021
  • The role of western Indian pleurotomariid gastropods in changing migration patterns of the family during the Cenozoic.
    S Bose, K., Das, S. S., Mondal
    2nd CPEG meeting- Crossing the Palaeontological-Ecological Gap, Berlin, 2021, 16 , 2021
    2021
  • Taxonomic and Ecological Diversity of Miocene Gastropods of the Dwarka Basin, Western India.
    SS Bose, K., Das
    5th International Meeting of Early-stage Researchers in Palaeontology … , 2021
    2021
  • Status of Gastropod diversity pattern of three basins of Indian subcontinent during Miocene reviewed.
    P Das, S. S., Bose, K., Goswami
    Deep Time Biodiversity of Bengal, An Outreach Programme, Indian Statistical … , 2020
    2020
  • Discrimination of the Holocene subfamilies of the Family Naticidae: A geometric morphometrics approach.
    S Sharma, N., Mondal, S., Das, S. S., Bose, K., Saha
    3rd National Geo-Research Scholars Meet, WIHG, Dehradun, India., 19-20 , 2019
    2019
  • Geometrical analysis of Shell Coiling in Gastropoda: A Reappraisal of Theoretical and Empirical Approaches through time.
    K Bose
    Geo-Symposium Jadavpur University, Kolkata, India., 7 , 2018
    2018