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Special Issue: A Century of Comparative Biomechanics: Emerging and Historical Perspectives on an Interdisciplinary Field

EDITORIAL

JEB: 100 years of discovery

COMMENTARIES

JEB: 100 years of discovery

Summary: The development of high-resolution, three-dimensional (3D) motion data has sparked significant paradigm shifts in comparative biomechanics, enabling the emergence of new questions as well as the reinterpretation of long-standing scientific concerns.

JEB: 100 years of discovery

Summary: Studying joint mobility, the set of all configurations that a joint can passively assume, can empower us to better tackle investigations of articular form–function relationships.

REVIEWS

JEB: 100 years of discovery

Summary: Rough substrates influence animal walking based on the relative, not absolute, scale of substrate features; this Review proposes terminology and metrics to enhance comparative study.

JEB: 100 years of discovery

Summary: This Review summarizes experimental studies of the biomechanics, neuromuscular control and dynamic models of octopus and other cephalopod arms.

JEB: 100 years of discovery

Summary: Flexibility represents a hidden axis of diversity among fishes that may have substantial impacts on swimming performance.

JEB: 100 years of discovery

Summary: This Review considers how study setting influences the selection of animals, behaviors and methodologies for studying animal motion.

JEB: 100 years of discovery

Summary: Tracking wild cheetahs is a challenging problem that pushes sensor technology to its limits and, consequently, a timeline of cheetah locomotion research also describes the evolution of field biomechanics methodology.

JEB: 100 years of discovery

Summary: Biological insights have played a central role in shaping the modern aeronautical field, yet there remain several areas for which a bio-informed approach may offer novel solutions including miniaturization, efficiency and autonomy.

JEB: 100 years of discovery

Summary: Comparisons of biomechanical performance for species of amphidromous goby fishes during feeding, adhesion, fast-start escapes and waterfall climbing across environmental, ontogenetic and geographic gradients provide ecological and evolutionary insights.

JEB: 100 years of discovery

Summary: Small organisms use spring propulsion and latch mediation to control cascading processes of energy release, ultimately transforming small amounts of energy into energy-dense events.

JEB: 100 years of discovery

Summary: Physical laws and ecological interactions determine how morphology affects biomechanical performance, which can influence the evolution of biological form and function.

JEB: 100 years of discovery

Summary: A review of comparative muscle physiology highlights diversity that both supports and refutes classic theories of contraction, and suggests future directions to advance our understanding of muscle contraction and adaptation.

JEB: 100 years of discovery

Summary: This Review examines how comparative biomechanics has transformed our understanding of the avian bill, from feeding biomechanics to vocalization and mechanosensory structures.

JEB: 100 years of discovery

Summary: This Review examines kinematic data from various panarthropod species to explore how sensory feedback interplays with leg pattern generators to drive flexible locomotion over complex terrain.

JEB: 100 years of discovery

Summary: Three-dimensional digital methods useful for the study of tetrapod locomotor biomechanics have matured in recent decades. Here, we summarise their progress, relevance and potential.

JEB: 100 years of discovery

Summary: In some species, skeletal muscle performance alters in response to long-term temperature changes; other anthropogenic environmental changes, including pollutants, might also alter animal tissue mechanics, locomotor performance and behaviour.

JEB: 100 years of discovery

Summary: This Review traces the evolution of technology in kinematic measurements over the past century and considers how those changes have influenced the nature of articles published in JEB.

RESEARCH ARTICLES

JEB: 100 years of discovery

Summary: Data on thousands of flights from foraging bees show that bees prefer to fly upwind, and that body angle and speed become more variable when bees fly downwind.

JEB: 100 years of discovery

Summary: Live visualization of hummingbird bill movements and intraoral space reveals how they transfer nectar from the tongue to the throat – the eco-evolutionary implications of these findings are discussed.

JEB: 100 years of discovery

Summary: Significant diversity in the length–force relationships of obliquely striated muscle, both within and between taxa, calls into question long-held assumptions about the factors that favored the evolution of oblique striation.

ECR SPOTLIGHTS

JEB: 100 years of discovery
JEB: 100 years of discovery
JEB: 100 years of discovery
JEB: 100 years of discovery
JEB: 100 years of discovery
JEB: 100 years of discovery
JEB: 100 years of discovery
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