Issues
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Cover image
Cover Image
Cover: Ring-tailed lemurs (Lemur catta) walk, canter and gallop overground at the Duke Lemur Center in Durham, NC, USA. Ring-tailed lemurs are a species of primate endemic to Madagascar that, unlike most other lemurs, frequently use overground locomotion for travel and foraging. O'Neill and Schmitt (pp. 1728−1739) describe the center of mass mechanics of ring-tailed lemurs during terrestrial locomotion, finding that this species employs several unique mechanisms to reduce their whole-body mechanical work and power requirements over a range of speeds and gaits. Photo credit: D. Haring. - PDF Icon PDF LinkTable of contents
JEB CLASSICS
COMMENTARY
REVIEW
METHODS & TECHNIQUES
RESEARCH ARTICLE
INSIDE JEB
Announcing the 2024 JEB Outstanding Paper Prize shortlist and winner

Every year JEB celebrates early-career researchers through the Outstanding Paper Prize. We recognise the shortlisted ECRS that contributed to 11 remarkable studies published in 2024 and congratulate the winner, Elise Laetz, from University of Groningen. See how else JEB supports and promotes ECRs.
Inside the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change with Hans-Otto Pörtner

During the past two decades, Hans-Otto Pörtner has steered climate change policy as a co-Chair of IPCC Working Group II. He tells us about the experience in this Perspective.
Photosynthesis turns symbiotic sea anemone's tentacles toward sun

Snakelocks sea anemones point their tentacles, packed with symbiotic algae, toward the sun so their lodgers can photosynthesize, and now Vengamanaidu Modepalli & colleagues have discovered that photosynthesis by the algae guides their host's tentacles towards the sun.
History of our journals

As our publisher, The Company of Biologists, turns 100 years old, read about JEB’s history and explore the journey of each of our sister journals: Development, Journal of Cell Science, Disease Models & Mechanisms and Biology Open.