Reprints 2025

TitleAuthorsYearJournal Citation
A hydrodynamic antenna: novel lateral line system in the tail of myliobatid stingraysChaumel J. et al.2025Proc. R. Soc. B 292: 20242192.
The tuna keel is a mechanosensory structureChaumel J. et al.2025iScience 28, 111578, January 17, 2025
Physics and physiology of fish collective movementZhang Y. et al.2025Newton, Volume 1, Issue 1, 100021
Slippery and Smooth Shark Skin: How Mucus Transforms
Surface Texture
Fischer M.J. et al.2025J Morphol. 2025 Apr;286(4):e70046
Are swimming fish dual oscillator systems? A case study using
free-swimming smooth dogfish sharks (Mustelus canis)
White C.F. et al.2025Journal of Experimental Biology 228, jeb249715
Fish schools in a vertical diamond formation: Effect of vertical spacing on hydrodynamic interactionsMenzer A. et al.2025Physical Review Fluids 10, 043104
Beyond planar: fish schools adopt ladder formations in 3DKo H. et al.2025Sci Rep 15, 20249 (2025)
Computational analysis of fish-foil pairing and wake energy
extraction in low-speed flow
Guo J. et al.2025Bioinspir. Biomim. 20 (2025) 056011
The Concord Field Station at Harvard University: foundational
contributions to organismal physiology and biomechanics
Biewener A. et al.2025Journal of Experimental Biology 228, jeb251226
Function of the tail in myliobatid rays: role in controlling body stabilityChaumel J. et al.2025R. Soc. Open Sci. 12: 251269
Quantifying the Denticle Multiverse: A Standardized Coding System to Capture Three Dimensional Morphological Variations for Quantitative Evolutionary and Ecological Studies of Elasmobranch DenticlesRubin L.D. et al.2025Integrative Organismal Biology, obaf021
Biomechanics and energetics of fish schooling behaviorLauder G.V. et al.2025Book chapter