Talia Weiss, Gary B Gillis, Jennifer Van Mullekom, John J Socha
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Skittering locomotion in cricket frogs: a form of porpoising.
Multiple species of frogs in the Ranidae family have been observed to 'skitter' across the water surface, but little is understood about the biomechanical or physical mechanisms that underlie this behavior. All documented descriptions are anecdotal, asserting simply that the frogs can cross the water surface without sinking. To study this form of interfacial locomotion, we recorded high-speed video of the northern cricket frog Acris crepitans and quantified its kinematics. We also compared its semi-aquatic behavior with the frogs' terrestrial locomotion. Contrary to expectations based on anecdotal knowledge, we found that cricket frogs do not maintain an above-surface position throughout the locomotor cycle. Instead, the frogs are completely submerged during both the launching and landing phase of a jump cycle, similar to porpoising in other animals. It is possible that leg-retraction time constrains these frogs from performing true surface-only locomotion.
期刊介绍:
Journal of Experimental Biology is the leading primary research journal in comparative physiology and publishes papers on the form and function of living organisms at all levels of biological organisation, from the molecular and subcellular to the integrated whole animal.