Issues
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Cover image
Cover Image
Cover: A honeybee (Apis mellifera) forager visiting a flower. The beauty and complexity of honeybee society have fascinated scientists since Aristotle's era. With modern techniques, researchers can dig deeper than Aristotle could have dreamed of, to the level of molecules that orchestrate bee behaviour. In the background is a model of the N-terminus of vitellogenin by Havukainen and others (pp. 582-592), a protein that participates in the control of the nurse−forager transition in bees. Photo credit: C. Bang. Vitellogenin model and layout: H. Havukainen. 2 2Close Modal - PDF Icon PDF LinkTable of contents
RESEARCH ARTICLE
CORRIGENDUM
ERRATUM
INSIDE JEB
Celebrating 100 years of discovery

We are proud to be celebrating 100 years of discovery in Journal of Experimental Biology. Visit our centenary webpage to find out more about how we are marking this historic milestone.
Craig Franklin launches our centenary celebrations

Editor-in-Chief Craig Franklin reflects on 100 years of JEB and looks forward to our centenary celebrations, including a supplementary special issue, a new early-career researcher interview series and the launch of our latest funding initiatives.
Looking back on the first issue of JEB

Journal of Experimental Biology launched in 1923 as The British Journal of Experimental Biology. As we celebrate our centenary, we look back at that first issue and the zoologists publishing their work in the new journal.
Webinar: Increasing the visibility and impact of your research
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Would you like to increase the visibility and impact of your research and raise your profile internationally? If so, register for the very practical webinar we are running in association with HUBS on 23 February 2023.
Biology Communication Workshop: Engaging the world in the excitement of research
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We are delighted to be sponsoring a Biology Communication Workshop for early-career researchers as part of JEB’s centenary celebrations. The workshop focuses on how to effectively communicate your science to other researchers and the public and takes place the day before the CSZ annual meeting, on 14 May 2023. Find out more and apply here.
Mexican fruit flies wave for distraction

Dinesh Rao and colleagues have discovered that Mexican fruit flies vanish in a blur in the eyes of predatory spiders when they wave their wings at the arachnids, buying the flies time to make their escape.