侧腹响尾蛇(Crotalus cerastes)的形态与运动运动学的比例和关系。

THE EGYPTIAN JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY Pub Date : 2022-04-01 Epub Date: 2022-04-19 DOI:10.1242/jeb.243817
Jessica L Tingle, Brian M Sherman, Theodore Garland
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引用次数: 0

摘要

无肢陆生动物的运动与有肢动物的运动有本质区别,但对其运动运动学和形态学的缩放研究却很少。我们研究了侧腹响尾蛇(Crotalus cerastes)的缩放和形态与运动的关系。在侧绕运动过程中,蛇会将身体的一部分抬起并向前移动,而其他部分则保持静态的地面接触。我们使用高速视频来量化整个动物的速度和加速度、身体部分抬起的高度以及身体波的频率、波长、振幅和倾斜角(倾斜程度)。运动学变量没有性别二态性,除波幅外,大多数变量都没有偏离等距测量。较大的侧翼动物的速度并不快,这与许多有肢陆生动物的研究结果相反。由于无需保持动态相似性(因为它们的运动受摩擦力而非惯性支配),无肢物种可能有更大的自由度来调节速度,而不受体型大小的影响。路径分析支持(1)体宽与波长之间的假设关系,表明较粗壮的侧腹蛇会形成较松散的曲线;(2)周期频率与整个动物速度之间的关系密切;(3)波长(正向)和振幅(负向)对速度的影响较弱。我们认为,侧卷蛇可能面临步长限制(振幅和波长都对步长有影响),超过这个限制就会牺牲稳定性。因此,增加频率可能是提高速度的最佳方法。最后,频率和倾斜角是相关的,这一结果值得今后从运动学和生理学的角度进行研究。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Scaling and relations of morphology with locomotor kinematics in the sidewinder rattlesnake Crotalus cerastes.

The movement of limbless terrestrial animals differs fundamentally from that of limbed animals, yet few scaling studies of their locomotor kinematics and morphology are available. We examined scaling and relations of morphology and locomotion in sidewinder rattlesnakes (Crotalus cerastes). During sidewinding locomotion, a snake lifts sections of its body up and forward while other sections maintain static ground contact. We used high-speed video to quantify whole-animal speed and acceleration; the height to which body sections are lifted; and the frequency, wavelength, amplitude and skew angle (degree of tilting) of the body wave. Kinematic variables were not sexually dimorphic, and most did not deviate from isometry, except wave amplitude. Larger sidewinders were not faster, contrary to many results from limbed terrestrial animals. Free from the need to maintain dynamic similarity (because their locomotion is dominated by friction rather than inertia), limbless species may have greater freedom to modulate speed independently of body size. Path analysis supported: (1) a hypothesized relationship between body width and wavelength, indicating that stouter sidewinders form looser curves; (2) a strong relationship between cycle frequency and whole-animal speed; and (3) weaker effects of wavelength (positive) and amplitude (negative) on speed. We suggest that sidewinding snakes may face a limit on stride length (to which amplitude and wavelength both contribute), beyond which they sacrifice stability. Thus, increasing frequency may be the best way to increase speed. Finally, frequency and skew angle were correlated, a result that deserves future study from the standpoint of both kinematics and physiology.

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