Issues
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Cover image
Cover Image
Cover: Bumblebees use visual information for flight speed control. Chequerboard patterns such as the one shown here were used by E. Baird, T. Kornfeldt and M. Dacke to investigate where in the visual field bumblebees measure visual information for flight speed control (pp. 1625-1632). Experiments using these patterns have shown that bumblebees reduce their flight speed when they enter cluttered environments; thus, reducing the risk of collision. Moreover, bumblebees are able to detect these cluttered environments well before they encounter them. Photograph by E. Baird.Close Modal - PDF Icon PDF LinkTable of contents
JEB CLASSICS
COMMENTARY
RESEARCH ARTICLE
CORRIGENDUM
INSIDE JEB
In the field: an interview with Harald Wolf
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In our new Conversation, Harald Wolf talks about his fieldwork experiences working with desert ants in Tunisia to understand their navigation.
Propose a new Workshop
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Our Workshops bring together leading experts and early-career researchers from a range of scientific backgrounds. Applications are now open to propose Workshops for 2024, one of which will be held in a Global South country.
Julian Dow steps down and John Terblanche joins the JEB team
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After 15 years with the journal, Julian Dow from University of Glasgow, UK, is stepping down as a Monitoring Editor. We wish Julian all the best for the future and welcome John Terblanche, Stellenbosch University, South Africa, who is joining the team. Julian talks about his long association with The Company of Biologists and the journal and John tells us about his life and career in this News article.
Ecotourism affecting iguana glucose tolerance
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Ecotourists feeding grapes on skewers to north Bahamian rock iguanas may be doing the reptiles more harm than good as the sugar charged diet is giving the animals high blood sugar.
Evolution of metabolic plasticity
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In their Commentary, Frank Seebacher and Julian Beaman propose that metabolic plasticity originated in prebiotic protocells and that it was a pre-requisite for effective transfer of genetic material across generations – the hallmark of Darwinian evolution.