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Journal of Experimental Biology 218 (24) December 2015 | Contents
3863
3866
INSIDE JEB
Schistosome parasite alters snail behaviour; Tree snakes’
keel gets a grip; Gas movement through aquaporins is
significant; Strong muscles contribute to fish boldness
RESEARCH ARTICLES
Among-species variation in the energy budgets of reefbuilding corals: scaling from coral polyps to communities
Hoogenboom, M., Rottier, C., Sikorski, S. and
Ferrier-Pagès, C.
3878
Skeletal muscle contractile function predicts activity and
behaviour in zebrafish
Seebacher, F., Little, A. G. and James, R. S.
3885
Acute cold and exercise training up-regulate similar
aspects of fatty acid transport and catabolism in house
sparrows (Passer domesticus)
Zhang, Y., Carter, T., Eyster, K. and Swanson, D. L.
3894
Three-dimensional morphology and strain of the human
Achilles free tendon immediately following eccentric heel
drop exercise
Obst, S. J., Newsham-West, R. and Barrett, R. S.
3901
Reproduction is not costly in terms of oxidative stress
Ołdakowski, Ł., Wasiluk, A., Sadowska, E. T.,
Koteja, P. and Taylor, J. R. E.
3911
Experimental evidence that litter size imposes an
oxidative challenge to offspring
Gibson, A. B., Garratt, M. and Brooks, R. C.
3919
Fear is the mother of invention: anuran embryos exposed
to predator cues alter life-history traits, post-hatching
behaviour and neuronal activity patterns
Gazzola, A., Brandalise, F., Rubolini, D., Rossi, P. and
Galeotti, P.
3931
The water channel aquaporin-1a1 facilitates movement of
CO2 and ammonia in zebrafish (Danio rerio) larvae
Talbot, K., Kwong, R. W. M., Gilmour, K. M. and
Perry, S. F.
3941
Morphology does not predict performance: jaw
curvature and prey crushing in durophagous
stingrays
Kolmann, M. A., Crofts, S. B., Dean, M. N.,
Summers, A. P. and Lovejoy, N. R.
3950
Sources and range of long-term variability of rhythmic
motor patterns in vivo
Yarger, A. M. and Stein, W.
3962
Infection with schistosome parasites in snails leads to
increased predation by prawns: implications for human
schistosomiasis control
Swartz, S. J., De Leo, G. A., Wood, C. L. and
Sokolow, S. H.
3968
Auditory modulation of wind-elicited walking behavior in
the cricket Gryllus bimaculatus
Fukutomi, M., Someya, M. and Ogawa, H.
3978
Why arboreal snakes should not be cylindrical: body
shape, incline and surface roughness have interactive
effects on locomotion
Jayne, B. C., Newman, S. J., Zentkovich, M. M. and
Berns, H. M.
3987
On doing two things at once: dolphin brain and
nose coordinate sonar clicks, buzzes and emotional
squeals with social sounds during fish capture
Ridgway, S., Samuelson Dibble, D., Van Alstyne, K.
and Price, D.
3996
The kinematics of directional control in the fast start of
zebrafish larvae
Nair, A., Azatian, G. and McHenry, M. J.
4005
Diet and endocrine effects on behavioral
maturation-related gene expression in the pars
intercerebralis of the honey bee brain
Wheeler, M. M., Ament, S. A., Rodriguez-Zas, S. L.,
Southey, B. and Robinson, G. E.
Journal of Experimental Biology
Cover: Corals have diverse colony morphologies ranging from elaborate branching structures to thin crusts molded to the reef. This image shows a
large branching coral colony in the centre, with column-shaped, encrusting and foliose corals beneath. Hoogenboom et al. ( pp. 3866-3877)
investigated how the productivity of coral assemblages depends on the types of species present on the reef by measuring multiple physiological traits
of common species. They found that estimated carbon uptake varied >20-fold between assemblages of species, but this variation was driven by
differences in the tissue area of different morphologies, rather than differences in area-specific physiological rates. Photo credit: Mia Hoogenboom.