Full R J, Zuccarello D A, Tullis A
Department of Integrative Biology, University of California, Berkeley 94720.
J Exp Biol. 1990 May;150:233-46. doi: 10.1242/jeb.150.1.233.
The mass-specific minimum cost of terrestrial locomotion (Cmin) decreases with an increase in body mass. This generalization spans nearly eight orders of magnitude in body mass and includes two phyla. The general relationship between metabolic cost and mass is striking. However, a significant amount of unexplained interspecific variation in Cmin exists at any given body mass. To determine how variation in morphology and physiology affects metabolic energy cost, we measured the oxygen consumption of three comparably sized insects running on a miniature treadmill; the American cockroach Periplaneta americana, the caterpillar hunting beetle Calosoma affine and the Australian field cricket Teleogryllus commodus. Steady-state oxygen consumption (VO2ss) increased linearly with speed. Cmin was similar for crickets and cockroaches (8.0 and 8.5 ml O2 g-1km-1, respectively), but was substantially lower for beetles (4.6 ml O2 g-1km-1). The predicted value of Cmin for all three insects was within the 95% confidence intervals of the Cmin versus body mass function. However, the 95% confidence intervals extend approximately 2.5-fold above and 40% below the regression line, making the variation at any given body mass nearly sixfold. Normalizing for the rate of muscle force production by determining the metabolic cost per stride failed to account for the interspecific variation in the cost of locomotion observed in the three insects. Ground contact costs (i.e. VO2ss multiplied by leg contact time during a stride) in insects were similar to those measured in mammals (1.5-3.1 J kg-1) and were independent of speed, but did not explain the interspecific variation in the cost of locomotion. Muscles of the caterpillar hunting beetle may have a greater mechanical advantage than muscles of the Australian field cricket and American cockroach. Variation in musculo-skeletal arrangement, apart from variation in body mass, could translate into significant differences in the minimum cost of terrestrial locomotion.
陆地运动的单位质量最小成本(Cmin)随体重增加而降低。这一普遍规律涵盖了近八个数量级的体重范围,涉及两个门。代谢成本与体重之间的一般关系十分显著。然而,在任何给定体重下,Cmin都存在大量无法解释的种间变异。为了确定形态和生理变异如何影响代谢能量成本,我们测量了在微型跑步机上奔跑的三种体型相当的昆虫的耗氧量,即美国蟑螂美洲大蠊、捕食毛虫的步甲类昆虫近亲步甲和澳大利亚田蟋澳洲油葫芦。稳态耗氧量(VO2ss)随速度呈线性增加。蟋蟀和蟑螂的Cmin相似(分别为8.0和8.5毫升氧气·克⁻¹·千米⁻¹),但步甲的Cmin则显著更低(4.6毫升氧气·克⁻¹·千米⁻¹)。这三种昆虫的Cmin预测值均在Cmin与体重函数的95%置信区间内。然而,95%置信区间在回归线之上约延伸2.5倍,在回归线之下约延伸40%,使得在任何给定体重下的变异近达六倍。通过确定每步的代谢成本来对肌肉力产生速率进行归一化处理,未能解释这三种昆虫在运动成本方面的种间变异。昆虫的地面接触成本(即VO2ss乘以一步中的腿部接触时间)与在哺乳动物中测得的成本相似(1.5 - 3.1焦耳·千克⁻¹),且与速度无关,但无法解释运动成本的种间变异。捕食毛虫的步甲的肌肉可能比澳大利亚田蟋和美国蟑螂的肌肉具有更大的机械优势。除体重变异外,肌肉骨骼排列的变异可能转化为陆地运动最小成本的显著差异。