Bishop P J, Graham D F, Lamas L P, Hutchinson J R, Rubenson J, Hancock J A, Wilson R S, Hocknull S A, Barrett R S, Lloyd D G, Clemente C J
Geosciences Program, Queensland Museum, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
School of Allied Health Sciences, Griffith University, Gold Coast, Queensland, Australia.
PLoS One. 2018 Feb 21;13(2):e0192172. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0192172. eCollection 2018.
How extinct, non-avian theropod dinosaurs moved is a subject of considerable interest and controversy. A better understanding of non-avian theropod locomotion can be achieved by better understanding terrestrial locomotor biomechanics in their modern descendants, birds. Despite much research on the subject, avian terrestrial locomotion remains little explored in regards to how kinematic and kinetic factors vary together with speed and body size. Here, terrestrial locomotion was investigated in twelve species of ground-dwelling bird, spanning a 1,780-fold range in body mass, across almost their entire speed range. Particular attention was devoted to the ground reaction force (GRF), the force that the feet exert upon the ground. Comparable data for the only other extant obligate, striding biped, humans, were also collected and studied. In birds, all kinematic and kinetic parameters examined changed continuously with increasing speed, while in humans all but one of those same parameters changed abruptly at the walk-run transition. This result supports previous studies that show birds to have a highly continuous locomotor repertoire compared to humans, where discrete 'walking' and 'running' gaits are not easily distinguished based on kinematic patterns alone. The influences of speed and body size on kinematic and kinetic factors in birds are developed into a set of predictive relationships that may be applied to extinct, non-avian theropods. The resulting predictive model is able to explain 79-93% of the observed variation in kinematics and 69-83% of the observed variation in GRFs, and also performs well in extrapolation tests. However, this study also found that the location of the whole-body centre of mass may exert an important influence on the nature of the GRF, and hence some caution is warranted, in lieu of further investigation.
已灭绝的非鸟类兽脚亚目恐龙的移动方式是一个备受关注且存在争议的话题。通过更好地理解其现代后代鸟类的陆地运动生物力学,能够更深入地了解非鸟类兽脚亚目恐龙的运动方式。尽管对此主题已有诸多研究,但在运动学和动力学因素如何随速度和体型变化方面,鸟类的陆地运动仍鲜有人探索。在此,对12种地栖鸟类的陆地运动进行了研究,这些鸟类的体重跨度达1780倍,涵盖了几乎整个速度范围。特别关注了地面反作用力(GRF),即脚部施加在地面上的力。还收集并研究了唯一现存的专性、跨步双足动物——人类的可比数据。在鸟类中,所有检测的运动学和动力学参数均随速度增加而持续变化,而在人类中,除一个参数外,其他相同参数在步行 - 跑步转换时会突然变化。这一结果支持了先前的研究,即与人类相比,鸟类具有高度连续的运动模式,仅基于运动学模式难以轻易区分离散的“行走”和“奔跑”步态。速度和体型对鸟类运动学和动力学因素的影响被发展成一组预测关系,可应用于已灭绝的非鸟类兽脚亚目恐龙。所得的预测模型能够解释79 - 93%的运动学观测变化以及69 - 83%的地面反作用力观测变化,并且在外推测试中表现良好。然而,本研究还发现全身质心的位置可能对地面反作用力的性质产生重要影响,因此在进一步研究之前,需谨慎对待。