Happy to share the description of the skeletal ontogeny of the Plainfin Midshipman, Porichthys notatus. Big shout out to @Fishguy_FHL, Jose Sisneros, and Rob Mohr to help me and Eric to find the nests. Open access at https://t.co/5E5elSJAJb
Early view paper out today led by @T_Argyriou, focusing on a vexing fossil fish called Brachydegma (weighted line drawing by C. Abraczinskas @UMichPaleo). Open access in @eLife: https://t.co/zSyK5izyUp
New #OpenAccess paper out today by Xindong Cui of IVPP in @NatureComms highlighting feeding innovations in Youngolepis, an Early Devonian stem lungfish from China (art: Brian Choo) https://t.co/TcA75x8arn
Meet the newly discovered⚡️Tembeassu titanicus -> in allusion to its large size⚡️Electric fishes of this group co-occur in the Paraná River🌎where T. marauna and T. titanicus occupy different habitats @AgenciaFAPESP@NMNH#FreshwaterFishes#Biodiversity https://t.co/fwsyp9JoES
Most teleosts have only 2 scleral ossifications, but not the denticle herring Denticeps clupeoides! Check out our most recent publication associated w/ the #overt project, & download the scans yourself (links in comment- soft tissue & skeletal) #brtc https://t.co/sfvHQlR44b
My first dissertation chapter is officially published! Find it here: https://t.co/F9gdsKVlGm @J_Exp_Biol
We quantified suction feeding mechanics in Polypterus bichir using XROMM🧵
Shout out to my co-authors: Callum Ross, Nick Gidmark, @jd_lc, and @mwestneat!
#Immunology is wild and I think we have made it justice! Our latest work is now published and I would love everyone who loves Immunobiology to read it. This is perhaps my favorite paper of my career so far. 🧵 https://t.co/1tk7AsTEFO
Researchers from the University of Chicago and the Andalusian Center for Developmental Biology in Spain show how a gene that controls the growth of bones at the terminal end of fish fins plays the same role in forming fingers and toes in tetrapods.
https://t.co/rIfQO2dmsB
New species alert! Meet a rare, critically endangered, rapids-loving Apteronotus albertoi -> Dr. Alberto Carvalho @MZUSP for his support generating µCT scan images for ‘‘Diversity and Evolution of the Gymnotiformes’’ @AgenciaFAPESP@NMNH
https://t.co/TidnMUbfe6 #asihpub
Full text for Morphology-based phylogeny of glass knifefishes @AgenciaFAPESP@NMNH
available in the link below
https://t.co/RmF7upNd8r
https://t.co/UDNDBTqZFY
Calling all #TeamFish! @Karly_Cohen, @Fishguy_FHL, and I's new paper shows the crazy tooth replacement rate in the Pacific lingcod: 20 new teeth per day! “The moment of tooth: rate, fate and pattern of Pacific lingcod dentition revealed by pulse-chase”
https://t.co/9L3EbP6f8N
New paper alert! Morphology‐based phylogeny of glass knifefishes⚡️⚡️⚡️ #JZSER
https://t.co/IaTUXhWUsW
Led by my former PhD student Gui Dutra⚡️ it highlights the critical role played by a diverse set of anatomical characters on phylogenetic reconstructions @AgenciaFAPESP@NMNH
Hey vertebrate morphology fans! Mark your calendars: next ICVM meeting was rescheduled to July 28- Aug 1 2023, on Cairns, Australia
Updates will be posted here and at our new webpage: https://t.co/VtmRqCL4HT
Reducing soft-tissue shrinkage artefacts caused by staining with Lugol’s solution | Scientific Reports
I am so pumped about this paper that I've already order the buffer!!
https://t.co/UOmnzlNtRO
Medusafishes get their name from their special relationship with jellyfishes. Jellyfish are part of a group known as Medusozoa, named for their resemblance of Medusa, from Greek mythology. Young Medusafishes live among jellyfishes for protection and to scavenge meals.