Our Special Issue 'Uncovering Developmental Diversity' is now complete! #DevSIDiversity

Explore the full table of contents, including review-type articles and research papers highlighting 32 different organisms from across the multicellular tree of life:
https://journals.biologists.com/dev/issue/151/20

I'm glad this Perspective is now published in @Dev_journal's Special Issue #DevSIDiversity, featuring a selection of travelling researchers who remind us there's always more to learn outside the walls of our labs. If you have a fieldwork story to share, why not post it on @the_node?

Read the full article, from bats to bugs, here:
https://doi.org/10.1242/dev.203084

Uncovering developmental diversity in the field

ABSTRACT. Many developmental biologists seldom leave the lab for research, relying instead on establishing colonies of traditional and emerging model systems. However, to fully understand the mechanisms and principles of development and evolution, including the role of ecology and the environment, it is important to study a diverse range of organisms in context. In this Perspective, we hear from five research teams from around the world about the importance and challenges of going into the field to study their organisms of interest. We also invite you to share your own fieldwork stories on the Node.

The Company of Biologists
It’s time for our #MidweekMovie! This week we’re tracking EB1 comets with Sarah Attrill, Liam Dolan & colleagues. They find that microtubules and actin filaments direct nuclear movement during the polarisation of Marchantia spore cells.
πŸ“– @Dev_journal: https://journals.biologists.com/dev/article/151/20/dev202823/361226/Microtubules-and-actin-filaments-direct-nuclear
#DevSIDiversity