Department of Biology, College of Charleston, Charleston, SC 29401, USA.
J Exp Biol. 2012 Feb 1;215(Pt 3):442-53. doi: 10.1242/jeb.058867.
Burst locomotion is thought to be closely linked to an organism's ability to survive and reproduce. During the burst, animals start from a standstill and then rapidly accelerate to near-maximum running speeds. Many previous studies have described the functional predictors of maximum running speed; however, only recently has work emerged that describes the morphological, functional and biomechanical underpinnings of acceleration capacity. Herein we present data on the three-dimensional hindlimb kinematics during burst locomotion, and the relationship between burst locomotor kinematics and locomotor performance in a small terrestrial lizard (Sceloporus woodi). We focus only on stance phase joint angular kinematics. Sceloporus woodi exhibited considerable variation in hindlimb kinematics and performance across the first three strides of burst locomotion. Stride 1 was defined by larger joint angular excursions at the knee and ankle; by stride 3, the knee and ankle showed smaller joint angular excursions. The hip swept through similar arcs across all strides, with most of the motion caused by femoral retraction and rotation. Metatarsophalangeal (MTP) kinematics exhibited smaller maximum angles in stride 1 compared with strides 2 and 3. The significant correlations between angular kinematics and locomotor performance were different across the first three strides. For stride 1, MTP kinematics predicted final maximum running speed; this correlation is likely explained by a correlation between stride 1 MTP kinematics and stride 2 acceleration performance. For stride 3, several aspects of joint kinematics at each joint predicted maximum running speed. Overall, S. woodi exhibits markedly different kinematics, performance and kinematics-performance correlations across the first three strides. This finding suggests that future studies of burst locomotion and acceleration performance should perform analyses on a stride-by-stride basis and avoid combining data from different strides across the burst locomotor event. Finally, the kinematics-performance correlations observed in S. woodi were quite different from those described for other species, suggesting that there is not a single kinematic pattern that is optimal for high burst performance.
爆发式运动被认为与生物体的生存和繁殖能力密切相关。在爆发期间,动物从静止状态开始,然后迅速加速到接近最大奔跑速度。许多先前的研究描述了最大奔跑速度的功能预测因素;然而,直到最近才出现了描述加速能力的形态、功能和生物力学基础的工作。在此,我们介绍了在爆发式运动过程中后肢运动学的三维数据,以及爆发式运动运动学与小型陆生蜥蜴(Sceloporus woodi)运动表现之间的关系。我们只关注支撑阶段关节角度运动学。Sceloporus woodi 在爆发式运动的前三步中表现出后肢运动学和性能的巨大变化。第一步的特征是膝关节和踝关节的关节角度运动幅度较大;到第三步,膝关节和踝关节的关节角度运动幅度较小。髋关节在所有步幅中都通过相似的弧面运动,大部分运动是由股骨回缩和旋转引起的。跖趾(MTP)运动学在第一步中的最大角度比第二和第三步小。在前三步中,角度运动学和运动表现之间的显著相关性是不同的。对于第一步,MTP 运动学预测最终的最大奔跑速度;这种相关性可能是由第一步 MTP 运动学与第二步加速性能之间的相关性解释的。对于第三步,每个关节的关节运动学的几个方面预测了最大奔跑速度。总体而言,S. woodi 在前三步中表现出明显不同的运动学、性能和运动学-性能相关性。这一发现表明,未来对爆发式运动和加速性能的研究应该逐步进行分析,避免将爆发式运动事件中的不同步幅的数据合并。最后,在 S. woodi 中观察到的运动学-性能相关性与其他物种描述的相关性有很大不同,这表明对于高爆发性能没有一个单一的运动学模式是最优的。