Konow Nicolai, Cheney Jorn A, Roberts Thomas J, Iriarte-Díaz Jose, Breuer Kenneth S, Waldman J Rhea S, Swartz Sharon M
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Brown University, Providence, RI 02912, USA
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Brown University, Providence, RI 02912, USA.
J Exp Biol. 2017 May 15;220(Pt 10):1820-1829. doi: 10.1242/jeb.144550. Epub 2017 Feb 24.
Animals respond to changes in power requirements during locomotion by modulating the intensity of recruitment of their propulsive musculature, but many questions concerning how muscle recruitment varies with speed across modes of locomotion remain unanswered. We measured normalized average burst EMG (aEMG) for pectoralis major and biceps brachii at different flight speeds in two relatively distantly related bat species: the aerial insectivore , and the primarily fruit-eating These ecologically distinct species employ different flight behaviors but possess similar wing aspect ratio, wing loading and body mass. Because propulsive requirements usually correlate with body size, and aEMG likely reflects force, we hypothesized that these species would deploy similar speed-dependent aEMG modulation. Instead, we found that aEMG was speed independent in and modulated in a U-shaped or linearly increasing relationship with speed in This interspecific difference may be related to differences in muscle fiber type composition and/or overall patterns of recruitment of the large ensemble of muscles that participate in actuating the highly articulated bat wing. We also found interspecific differences in the speed dependence of 3D wing kinematics: modulates wing flexion during upstroke significantly more than Overall, we observed two different strategies to increase flight speed: tends to modulate aEMG, and tends to modulate wing kinematics. These strategies may reflect different requirements for avoiding negative lift and overcoming drag during slow and fast flight, respectively, a subject we suggest merits further study.
动物在运动过程中通过调节推进肌肉组织的募集强度来应对功率需求的变化,但许多关于肌肉募集如何随不同运动模式下的速度变化的问题仍未得到解答。我们在两种亲缘关系相对较远的蝙蝠物种中,测量了不同飞行速度下胸大肌和肱二头肌的归一化平均爆发肌电图(aEMG):食虫蝙蝠和主要以水果为食的蝙蝠。这些生态上不同的物种采用不同的飞行行为,但具有相似的翼展比、翼载荷和体重。由于推进需求通常与体型相关,且aEMG可能反映力量,我们假设这些物种会采用相似的速度依赖性aEMG调制。然而,我们发现食虫蝙蝠的aEMG与速度无关,而主要以水果为食的蝙蝠的aEMG与速度呈U形或线性增加关系。这种种间差异可能与参与驱动高度灵活的蝙蝠翅膀的大量肌肉的肌纤维类型组成差异和/或整体募集模式有关。我们还发现了三维翅膀运动学速度依赖性的种间差异:食虫蝙蝠在向上冲程期间对翅膀弯曲的调制明显多于主要以水果为食的蝙蝠。总体而言,我们观察到两种提高飞行速度的不同策略:食虫蝙蝠倾向于调制aEMG,而主要以水果为食的蝙蝠倾向于调制翅膀运动学。这些策略可能分别反映了在慢速和快速飞行期间避免负升力和克服阻力的不同需求,我们认为这一主题值得进一步研究。