Issues
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Cover image
Cover Image
Cover: A humpback whale (Megaptera novaeangliae) lunges through the surface to fill its buccal pouch with 30 tons of water and capelin in Disko Bay, West Greenland. Simon et al. (pp. 3786−3798) report the sequence of events within a lunge and show that the whales fluke hard to overtake their agile prey and to keep momentum after the lunge to save energy. Despite a low duty cycle of feeding, the higher density of prey targeted by humpback whales enables them to acquire prey at similar rates to those of the slow continuous feeding filtering balaenids. Image credit: Malene Simon.Close Modal - PDF Icon PDF LinkTable of contents
METHODS & TECHNIQUES
RESEARCH ARTICLE
INSIDE JEB
OUTSIDE JEB
In the field: an interview with Martha Muñoz

Martha Muñoz is an Assistant Professor at Yale University, investigating the evolutionary biology of anole lizards and lungless salamanders. In our new Conversation, she talks about her fieldwork in Indonesia, Costa Rica, the Dominican Republic and the Appalachian Mountains, including a death-defying dash to the top of a mountain through an approaching hurricane.
Call for new preLighters
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preLights is the preprint highlighting community supported by The Company of Biologists. At the heart of preLights are our preLighters: early-career researchers who select and write about interesting new preprints for the research community. We are currently looking for new preLighters to join our team. Find out more and apply here.
Graham Scott in conversation with Big Biology

Graham Scott talks to Big Biology about the oxygen cascade in mice living on mountaintops, extreme environments for such small organisms. In this JEB-sponsored episode, they discuss the concept of symmorphosis and the evolution of the oxygen cascade.
Trap-jaw ants coordinate tendon and exoskeleton for perfect mandible arc
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Trap-jaw ants run the risk of tearing themselves apart when they fire off their mandibles, but Greg Sutton & co have discovered that the ants simultaneously push and pull the mandibles using energy stored in a head tendon and their exoskeleton to drive the jaws in a perfect arc.
Hearing without a tympanic ear
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In their Review, Grace Capshaw, Jakob Christensen-Dalsgaard and Catherine Carr explore the mechanisms of hearing in extant atympanate vertebrates and the implications for the early evolution of tympanate hearing.