Issues
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Cover image
Cover Image
Cover: A Weddell seal pup rests on the ice, its lanugo still wet from a recent swim. Pups begin swimming with their mothers during the dependency period. The brown natal lanugo indicates the pup has not begun molting. Pearson et al. (jeb242773) found pre-molt and molting pups have higher resting metabolic rates in water than post-molt pups and incur additional costs in water compared with air. Despite the increased costs, molting pups spend the most time in the water, indicating an energetic trade-off between expending energy in the water and developing physiological and behavioral capabilities associated with diving. Photo credit: Linnea Pearson, NMFS Permit # 21006-01, ACA Permit 2018-013 M#1.
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INSIDE JEB
COMMENTARY
Biological constraints on configural odour mixture perception
Summary: Based on recent, convergent data from multiple animal species, including humans, we argue that some odour mixtures are spontaneously processed configurally, i.e. as odour objects, whereas others are not.
METHODS & TECHNIQUES
Micro-biopsies: a less invasive technique for investigating human muscle fiber mechanics
Summary: Mechanical experiments can be successfully performed on human micro-biopsy samples to determine passive and active muscle fiber properties.
RESEARCH ARTICLES
Wind of change: a diurnal skink thermoregulates between cooler set-points and for an increased amount of time in the presence of wind
Highlighted Article: Under experimental conditions where skinks could raise their body temperatures only by entering a wind tunnel, basking continued but thermoregulatory set-points were lowered in the presence of wind.
Breathing versus feeding in the Pacific hagfish
Summary: Hagfish ingest large meals (20% of body mass) by engulfment, swallowing rapidly through the velar chamber into the intestine, followed by elevated oxygen consumption and utilization, and complex changes in ventilation.
Effects of neurotransmitter receptor antagonists on sea urchin righting behavior and tube foot motility
Summary: The use of neurotransmitter receptor antagonists indicates roles for the glycinergic, dopaminergic and adrenergic systems in the righting response of sea urchins, and additionally a role of the dopaminergic system in the neural processing of the righting response.
Context-dependent influence of threat on honey bee social network dynamics and brain gene expression
Summary: An individual honey bee's societal role determines the extent to which environmental stimuli are biologically embedded to influence social activity and brain gene expression.
Colour vision in stomatopod crustaceans: more questions than answers
Summary: Stomatopods are able to distinguish both high and low saturation colours from greys, but this ability decreases over time under artificial lighting, suggesting plasticity in their colour vision.
How octopus arm muscle contractile properties and anatomical organization contribute to arm functional specialization
Summary: Octopus arm functional properties emerge from muscle contractile properties and limb anatomical organization and underpin behavioral ‘specialization’ of arm portions.
They like to move it (move it): walking kinematics of balitorid loaches of Thailand
Summary: Balitorid loaches exhibit a variety of locomotor strategies on land, ranging from terrestrial swimming to tetrapod-like walking across morphotypes.
TRPM2 causes sensitization to oxidative stress but attenuates high-temperature injury in the sea anemone Nematostella vectensis
Summary: Analysis of expression and in vivo function of the TRPM2 channel in the model organism Nematostella vectensis shows that the physiological function of TRPM2 is similar between cnidarian and human orthologues.
Parasitoid wasp venom manipulates host innate behavior via subtype-specific dopamine receptor activation
Highlighted Article: Subtype-specific dopamine receptors are involved in the manipulation of host behavior by the parasitoid jewel wasp.
Metabolic cost of thermoregulation decreases after the molt in developing Weddell seal pups
Highlighted Article: Developmental stage, not calendar age, determines thermal capabilities of Weddell seal pups. Molting pups spend more time in water despite incurring greater metabolic costs, suggesting early swimming behaviors are essential.
Modular lung ventilation in Boa constrictor
Highlighted Article: Boa constrictors can modulate the location of lung ventilation in response to hindered rib motions. This ability may have been an additional innovation of snakes that contributed to the evolution of constriction and large prey ingestion in the clade.
Energy expenditure does not solely explain step length–width choices during walking
Summary: A novel method to measure equally preferred stepping patterns in human walking reveals that equally preferable gaits do not translate into energy minimization.
Rates of warming impact oxidative stress in zebrafish (Danio rerio)
Summary: Different rates of temperature changes elicit different rates of reactive oxygen production, indicating that short-term thermal transients are an important aspect of habitat quality for zebrafish.
Arapaima gigas maintains gas exchange separation in severe aquatic hypoxia but does not suffer branchial oxygen loss
Summary:Arapaima gigas maintains aquatic CO2 excretion in severely hypoxic water but can completely avoid oxygen loss.
Impact of natural and artificial prenatal stimulation on the behavioural profile of Japanese quail
Highlighted Article: Exposure of quail embryos to prenatal auditory stimulation causes juvenile quail to develop differently depending on the type of stimulation perceived.
A test of context- and sex-dependent dopaminergic effects on the behavior of a gregarious bird, the common waxbill, Estrilda astrild
Summary: In common waxbills, results suggest that dopaminergic effects on social behavior via the dopamine D2-like receptor family (D2R) involve different types of context or sex dependence.
Microinjection-based CRISPR/Cas9 mutagenesis in the decapoda crustaceans Neocaridina heteropoda and Eriocheir sinensis
Summary: A novel microinjection-based CRISPR/Cas9 method for Neocaridina heteropoda and Eriocheir sinensis embryos to introduce Nh-scarlet and Es-scarlet mutations changed their eye color and shape.
CORRECTION
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.