Young Jesse W, Stricklen Bethany M, Chadwell Brad A
Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, Northeast Ohio Medical University (NEOMED), Rootstown, OH 44272, USA Musculoskeletal Biology Research Focus Area, NEOMED, Rootstown, OH 44272, USA School of Biomedical Sciences, Kent State University, Kent, OH 44240, USA
Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, Northeast Ohio Medical University (NEOMED), Rootstown, OH 44272, USA.
J Exp Biol. 2016 Sep 1;219(Pt 17):2659-72. doi: 10.1242/jeb.140939.
Locomotion is precarious in an arboreal habitat, where supports can vary in both diameter and level of compliance. Several previous studies have evaluated the influence of substrate diameter on the locomotor performance of arboreal quadrupeds. The influence of substrate compliance, however, has been mostly unexamined. Here, we used a multifactorial experimental design to investigate how perturbations in both diameter and compliance affect the gait kinematics of marmosets (Callithrix jacchus; N=2) moving over simulated arboreal substrates. We used 3D-calibrated video to quantify marmoset locomotion over a horizontal trackway consisting of variably sized poles (5, 2.5 and 1.25 cm in diameter), analyzing a total of 120 strides. The central portion of the trackway was either immobile or mounted on compliant foam blocks, depending on condition. We found that narrowing diameter and increasing compliance were both associated with relatively longer substrate contact durations, though adjustments to diameter were often inconsistent relative to compliance-related adjustments. Marmosets also responded to narrowing diameter by reducing speed, flattening center of mass (CoM) movements and dampening support displacement on the compliant substrate. For the subset of strides on the compliant support, we found that speed, contact duration and CoM amplitude explained >60% of the variation in substrate displacement over a stride, suggesting a direct performance advantage to these kinematic adjustments. Overall, our results show that compliant substrates can exert a significant influence on gait kinematics. Substrate compliance, and not just support diameter, should be considered a critical environmental variable when evaluating locomotor performance in arboreal quadrupeds.
在树栖栖息地中,运动是不稳定的,因为支撑物的直径和顺应性水平都可能不同。此前已有多项研究评估了底物直径对树栖四足动物运动性能的影响。然而,底物顺应性的影响大多未被研究。在这里,我们采用多因素实验设计,研究直径和顺应性的扰动如何影响狨猴(Callithrix jacchus;N = 2)在模拟树栖底物上移动时的步态运动学。我们使用三维校准视频来量化狨猴在由不同尺寸的杆子(直径分别为5厘米、2.5厘米和1.25厘米)组成的水平轨道上的运动,共分析了120步。根据实验条件,轨道的中央部分要么固定不动,要么安装在顺应性泡沫块上。我们发现,直径变窄和顺应性增加都与相对较长的底物接触持续时间有关,不过相对于与顺应性相关的调整,直径调整往往不一致。狨猴还通过降低速度、使质心(CoM)运动变平缓以及抑制顺应性底物上的支撑位移来应对直径变窄的情况。对于在顺应性支撑物上的步幅子集,我们发现速度、接触持续时间和CoM幅度解释了一步中底物位移变化的60%以上,这表明这些运动学调整具有直接的性能优势。总体而言,我们的结果表明,顺应性底物可对步态运动学产生重大影响。在评估树栖四足动物的运动性能时,底物顺应性,而不仅仅是支撑直径,应被视为一个关键的环境变量。