Walter Rebecca M, Carrier David R
Department of Biology, 201 South Biology Building, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT 84112, USA.
J Exp Biol. 2002 Jul;205(Pt 14):2135-41. doi: 10.1242/jeb.205.14.2135.
Because the force required to rotate a body about an axis is directly proportional to its rotational inertia about the axis, it is likely that animals with high rotational inertia would be constrained in their turning abilities. Given that rotational inertia scales with mass(1.67) in geometrically similar animals, whereas the ability to apply torque scales with mass(1.00), larger animals would be expected to have more difficulty turning than smaller animals of similar shape. To determine how rotational inertia scales with body mass, we used the fact that the period of a physical pendulum is proportional to its rotational inertia(0.50), and measured rotational inertia in two groups of vertebrates with greatly different body shapes: murine rodents (Mus domesticus and Rattus norvegicus) and lizards (Iguana iguana and Varanus exanthematicus). Rotational inertia did not deviate significantly from isometric scaling in the murine rodents as a group or in the varanid lizards, scaling with mass(1.63) and mass(1.59), respectively. Although rotational inertia did scale with negative allometry in iguanas and rats alone, with mass(1.56) and mass(1.42), respectively, it still increased much more quickly with increasing mass than the predicted ability to apply torque. This suggests either that these animals are not constrained by rotational inertia because of their relatively small size or that larger rodents and lizards are poorer turners than smaller ones. The murine rodents had a 3.0- to 4.9-fold lower rotational inertia than similarly sized lizards of either species. Given that the basal synapsids had body proportions and limb configurations similar to those of modern lizards, we suggest that the loss of the large muscular tail and elongated body form during the evolution of cynodonts and mammals reduced rotational inertia and probably improved turning ability.
由于使物体绕轴旋转所需的力与其绕该轴的转动惯量成正比,转动惯量高的动物其转弯能力可能会受到限制。鉴于在几何形状相似的动物中,转动惯量与质量的1.67次方成正比,而施加扭矩的能力与质量的1.00次方成正比,预计体型较大的动物比形状相似的体型较小的动物转弯更困难。为了确定转动惯量如何随体重变化,我们利用了物理摆的周期与其转动惯量的0.50次方成正比这一事实,并测量了两组体型差异极大的脊椎动物的转动惯量:鼠类啮齿动物(小家鼠和褐家鼠)和蜥蜴(绿鬣蜥和草原巨蜥)。作为一个群体,鼠类啮齿动物或巨蜥科蜥蜴的转动惯量与等比缩放并无显著偏差,分别与质量的1.63次方和1.59次方成正比。尽管单独来看,鬣蜥和大鼠的转动惯量呈负异速生长,分别与质量的1.56次方和1.42次方成正比,但随着质量增加,其增加速度仍比预测的施加扭矩能力快得多。这表明要么这些动物因其相对较小的体型不受转动惯量的限制,要么体型较大的啮齿动物和蜥蜴比体型较小的转弯能力更差。鼠类啮齿动物的转动惯量比同等体型的任何一种蜥蜴低3.0至4.9倍。鉴于基干合弓纲动物的身体比例和肢体构型与现代蜥蜴相似,我们认为在犬齿兽类和哺乳动物的进化过程中,大肌肉尾巴和细长身体形态的丧失降低了转动惯量,可能提高了转弯能力。