Issues
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Cover image
Cover Image
Cover: The background image shows an adult female of the malaria mosquito (Anopheles gambiae) in the process of ingesting a blood meal while urinating (fluid droplet emerging from the tip on the abdomen) on the human host (photo credit: Jon Wilson, Birkbeck College). Inset (from top to bottom): Allodapula variegata drying out nectar on its tongue (photo credit: Michael Ellis); septate junctions from Drosophila Malpighian tubule (photo credit: Julian Dow/Pablo Cabrero); colony of Apis florea honeybees (photo credit: Christian Pirk); and fed 5th-stage Rhodnius prolixus (photo credit: Simon Maddrell). - PDF Icon PDF LinkTable of contents
EDITORIAL
JEB CLASSICS
RESEARCH ARTICLE
REVIEW
INSIDE JEB
New funding schemes for junior faculty staff

In celebration of our 100th anniversary, JEB has launched two new grants to support junior faculty staff working in animal comparative physiology and biomechanics who are within five years of setting up their first lab/research group. Check out our ECR Visiting Fellowships and Research Partnership Kickstart Travel Grants.
JEB@100: an interview with Monitoring Editor Stuart Egginton

Stuart Egginton reveals how he overcame the challenges of being a comparative physiologist in a medical school and how he would tell his younger self to trust his instincts when pursuing new ideas.
Travelling Fellowships from JEB

Our Travelling Fellowships offer up to £3,000 to graduate students and post-doctoral researchers wishing to make collaborative visits to other laboratories. Next deadline to apply is 27 October 2023
Feedforward and feedback control in the neuromechanics

Auke J. Ijspeert and Monica A. Daley provide an overview of key knowledge gained from comparative vertebrate experiments and insights obtained from neuromechanical simulations and robotic approaches. Read the full Centenary Review Article here.
Light fine-tunes electric fish pulses to keep them in the shade

Weakly electric fish perceive their surroundings through electric chirrups and now Ana Camargo & colleagues have revealed that light fine-tunes the fish's electric pulses to ensure that they remain scheduled beneath the mats of vegetation they use for shelter, avoiding penetrating beams of light that could give them away.