Hutchinson John R, Schwerda Delf, Famini Daniel J, Dale Robert H I, Fischer Martin S, Kram Rodger
Structure and Motion Laboratory, Department of Veterinary Basic Sciences, The Royal Veterinary College, University of London, Hatfield, Hertfordshire, AL9 7TA, UK.
J Exp Biol. 2006 Oct;209(Pt 19):3812-27. doi: 10.1242/jeb.02443.
For centuries, elephant locomotion has been a contentious and confusing challenge for locomotion scientists to understand, not only because of technical difficulties but also because elephant locomotion is in some ways atypical of more familiar quadrupedal gaits. We analyzed the locomotor kinematics of over 2400 strides from 14 African and 48 Asian elephant individuals (body mass 116-4632 kg) freely moving over ground at a 17-fold range of speeds, from slow walking at 0.40 m s(-1) to the fastest reliably recorded speed for elephants, 6.8 m s(-1). These data reveal that African and Asian elephants have some subtle differences in how size-independent kinematic parameters change with speed. Although elephants use a lateral sequence footfall pattern, like many other quadrupeds, they maintain this footfall pattern at all speeds, shifting toward a 25% phase offset between limbs (singlefoot) as they increase speed. The duty factors of elephants are greater for the forelimbs than for the hindlimbs, so an aerial phase for the hindquarters is reached at slower speeds than for the forequarters. This aerial phase occurs at a Froude number of around 1, matching theoretical predictions. At faster speeds, stance and swing phase durations approach asymptotes, with the duty factor beginning to level off, concurrent with an increase in limb compliance that likely keeps peak forces relatively low. This increase of limb compliance is reflected by increased compression of the hindlimbs. Like other tetrapods, smaller elephants are relatively more athletic than larger ones, but still move very similarly to adults even at <500 kg. At any particular speed they adopt greater relative stride frequencies and relative stride lengths compared to larger elephants. This extends to near-maximal locomotor performance as well - smaller elephants reach greater Froude numbers and smaller duty factors, hence likely reach relatively greater peak loads on their limbs and produce this force more rapidly. A variety of lines of kinematic evidence support the inference that elephants change their mechanics near a Froude number of 1 (if not at slower speeds), at least to using more compliant limbs, if not spring-like whole-body kinetics. In some ways, elephants move similarly to many other quadrupeds, such as increasing speed mainly by increasing stride frequency (except at fast speeds), and they match scaling predictions for many stride parameters. The main difference from most other animals is that elephants never change their footfall pattern to a gait that uses a whole-body aerial phase. Our large dataset establishes what the normal kinematics of elephant locomotion are, and can also be applied to identify gait abnormalities that may signal musculoskeletal pathologies, a matter of great importance to keepers of captive elephants.
几个世纪以来,大象的运动一直是运动科学家们在理解上颇具争议且令人困惑的挑战,这不仅是因为技术难题,还因为大象的运动在某些方面不同于更为常见的四足步态。我们分析了14头非洲象和48头亚洲象(体重116 - 4632千克)在地面上自由移动时超过2400步的运动学数据,其速度范围达17倍之多,从0.40米/秒的慢走速度到大象可靠记录的最快速度6.8米/秒。这些数据表明,非洲象和亚洲象在与体型无关的运动学参数随速度变化的方式上存在一些细微差异。尽管大象像许多其他四足动物一样采用侧序步法模式,但它们在所有速度下都保持这种步法模式,随着速度增加,四肢之间的相位偏移会向25%转变(单脚跳)。大象前肢的负荷系数大于后肢,因此后躯达到腾空阶段的速度比前躯慢。这个腾空阶段出现在弗劳德数约为1时,与理论预测相符。在更快的速度下,支撑期和摆动期的持续时间接近渐近线,负荷系数开始趋于平稳,同时肢体顺应性增加,这可能使峰值力保持相对较低。后肢压缩增加反映了这种肢体顺应性的增加。与其他四足动物一样,体型较小的大象相对比体型较大的大象更具运动能力,但即使体重小于500千克,它们的运动方式仍与成年大象非常相似。在任何特定速度下,与体型较大的大象相比,它们采用更大的相对步频和相对步长。这也延伸到接近最大运动性能方面——体型较小的大象达到更高的弗劳德数和更小的负荷系数,因此可能在肢体上承受相对更大的峰值负荷,并更快地产生这种力。各种运动学证据支持这样的推断,即大象在弗劳德数接近1时(如果不是在更低速度时)改变其力学机制,至少会使用更具顺应性的肢体,如果不是像弹簧一样的全身动力学。在某些方面,大象的运动方式与许多其他四足动物相似,比如主要通过增加步频来提高速度(快速时除外),并且它们在许多步幅参数上符合缩放预测。与大多数其他动物的主要区别在于,大象从不将其步法模式改变为使用全身腾空阶段的步态。我们的大型数据集确定了大象正常的运动学特征,也可用于识别可能表明肌肉骨骼疾病的步态异常,这对圈养大象的饲养员来说至关重要。