Ariel L. Camp
Affiliations: | 2009-2015 | Ecology & Evolutionary Biology | Brown University, Providence, RI |
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"Ariel Camp"
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Publications
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Jimenez Y, Camp AL. (2023) Beam theory predicts muscle deformation and vertebral curvature during feeding in rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss). The Journal of Experimental Biology |
Li EY, Kaczmarek EB, Olsen AM, et al. (2022) Royal knifefish generate powerful suction feeding through large neurocranial elevation and high epaxial muscle power. The Journal of Experimental Biology |
Camp AL, Brainerd EL. (2022) A new conceptual framework for the musculoskeletal biomechanics and physiology of ray-finned fishes. The Journal of Experimental Biology. 225 |
Camp AL. (2021) A neck-like vertebral motion in fish. Proceedings. Biological Sciences. 288: 20211091 |
Camp AL, Olsen AM, Hernandez LP, et al. (2020) Fishes can use axial muscles as anchors or motors for powerful suction feeding. The Journal of Experimental Biology. 223 |
Weller HI, Olsen AM, Camp AL, et al. (2020) An XROMM Study of Food Transport and Swallowing in Channel Catfish Integrative Organismal Biology. 2 |
van Meer NMME, Weller HI, Manafzadeh AR, et al. (2019) Intra-oropharyngeal food transport and swallowing in white-spotted bamboo sharks. The Journal of Experimental Biology |
Olsen AM, Hernández LP, Camp AL, et al. (2019) Channel catfish use higher coordination to capture prey than to swallow. Proceedings. Biological Sciences. 286: 20190507 |
Camp AL. (2019) What fish can teach us about the feeding functions of postcranial muscles and joints. Integrative and Comparative Biology |
Jimenez YE, Camp AL, Grindall JD, et al. (2018) Axial morphology and 3D neurocranial kinematics in suction-feeding fishes. Biology Open. 7 |