The incomparable fascination of comparative physiology: 40 years with animals in the field and laboratory

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Abstract

This paper is not meant to be a review article. Instead, it gives an overview of the major research projects that the author, together with his students, colleagues and collaborators, has worked on. Although the main focus of the author’s work has always been the fish lateral line, this paper is mainly about all the other research projects he did or that were done in his laboratory. These include studies on fishing spiders, weakly electric fish, seals, water rats, bottom dwelling sharks, freshwater rays, venomous snakes, birds of prey, fire loving beetles and backswimmers. The reasons for this diversity of research projects? Simple. The authors’s lifelong enthusiasm for animals, and nature's ingenuity in inventing new biological solutions. Indeed, this most certainly was a principal reason why Karl von Frisch and Alfred Kühn founded the Zeitschrift für vergleichende Physiologie (now Journal of Comparative Physiology A) 100 years ago.

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Bleckmann, H. (2024, March 1). The incomparable fascination of comparative physiology: 40 years with animals in the field and laboratory. Journal of Comparative Physiology A: Neuroethology, Sensory, Neural, and Behavioral Physiology. Springer Science and Business Media Deutschland GmbH. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00359-023-01681-3

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