Blob RW, Biewener AA
Committee on Evolutionary Biology, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637, USA and Department of Geology, Field Museum of Natural History, Roosevelt Road at Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, IL 60605, USA and Concord Field Station, MCZ, Harvard Univer.
J Exp Biol. 1999 May;202 (Pt 9):1023-46. doi: 10.1242/jeb.202.9.1023.
Limb postures of terrestrial tetrapods span a continuum from sprawling to fully upright; however, most experimental investigations of locomotor mechanics have focused on mammals and ground-dwelling birds that employ parasagittal limb kinematics, leaving much of the diversity of tetrapod locomotor mechanics unexplored. This study reports measurements of in vivo locomotor strain from the limb bones of lizard (Iguana iguana) and crocodilian (Alligator mississippiensis) species, animals from previously unsampled phylogenetic lineages with non-parasagittal limb posture and kinematics. Principal strain orientations and shear strain magnitudes indicate that the limb bones of these species experience considerable torsion during locomotion. This contrasts with patterns commonly observed in mammals, but matches predictions from kinematic observations of axial rotation in lizard and crocodilian limbs. Comparisons of locomotor load magnitudes with the mechanical properties of limb bones in Alligator and Iguana indicate that limb bone safety factors in bending for these species range from 5.5 to 10.8, as much as twice as high as safety factors previously calculated for mammals and birds. Limb bone safety factors in shear (3.9-5.4) for Alligator and Iguana are also moderately higher than safety factors to yield in bending for birds and mammals. Finally, correlations between limb posture and strain magnitudes in Alligator show that at some recording locations limb bone strains can increase during upright locomotion, in contrast to expectations based on size-correlated changes in posture among mammals that limb bone strains should decrease with the use of an upright posture. These data suggest that, in some lineages, strain magnitudes may not have been maintained at constant levels through the evolution of a non-sprawling posture unless the postural change was accompanied by a shift to parasagittal kinematics or by an evolutionary decrease in body size.
陆生四足动物的肢体姿势涵盖了从 sprawled 到完全直立的连续范围;然而,大多数关于运动力学的实验研究都集中在采用矢状旁肢体运动学的哺乳动物和地栖鸟类上,四足动物运动力学的许多多样性仍未得到探索。本研究报告了蜥蜴(绿鬣蜥)和鳄鱼(密西西比鳄)物种肢体骨骼的体内运动应变测量结果,这些动物来自以前未采样的系统发育谱系,具有非矢状旁肢体姿势和运动学。主应变方向和剪应变大小表明,这些物种的肢体骨骼在运动过程中经历了相当大的扭转。这与在哺乳动物中常见的模式形成对比,但与蜥蜴和鳄鱼肢体轴向旋转的运动学观察预测相符。将运动负荷大小与短吻鳄和鬣蜥肢体骨骼的力学性能进行比较表明,这些物种在弯曲时的肢体骨骼安全系数范围为5.5至10.8,高达先前为哺乳动物和鸟类计算的安全系数的两倍。短吻鳄和鬣蜥在剪切时的肢体骨骼安全系数(3.9 - 5.4)也略高于鸟类和哺乳动物在弯曲时的屈服安全系数。最后,短吻鳄肢体姿势与应变大小之间的相关性表明,在某些记录位置,肢体骨骼应变在直立运动过程中会增加,这与基于哺乳动物姿势与体型相关变化的预期相反,即随着直立姿势的使用,肢体骨骼应变应该会降低。这些数据表明,在某些谱系中,除非姿势变化伴随着向矢状旁运动学的转变或体型的进化减小,否则通过非 sprawled 姿势的进化,应变大小可能不会保持在恒定水平。