Department of Mechanical Engineering, Stanford University, Stanford, United States.
Elife. 2019 Aug 6;8:e46415. doi: 10.7554/eLife.46415.
Birds land on a wide range of complex surfaces, yet it is unclear how they grasp a perch reliably. Here, we show how Pacific parrotlets exhibit stereotyped leg and wing dynamics regardless of perch diameter and texture, but foot, toe, and claw kinematics become surface-specific upon touchdown. A new dynamic grasping model, which integrates our detailed measurements, reveals how birds stabilize their grasp. They combine predictable toe pad friction with probabilistic friction from their claws, which they drag to find surface asperities-dragging further when they can squeeze less. Remarkably, parrotlet claws can undergo superfast movements, within 1-2 ms, on moderately slippery surfaces to find more secure asperities when necessary. With this strategy, they first ramp up safety margins by squeezing before relaxing their grasp. The model further shows it is advantageous to be small for stable perching when high friction relative to normal force is required because claws can find more usable surface, but this trend reverses when required friction shrinks. This explains how many animals and robots may grasp complex surfaces reliably.
鸟类可以降落在各种复杂的表面上,但它们如何可靠地抓住栖木还不清楚。在这里,我们展示了太平洋长尾鹦鹉如何表现出刻板的腿部和翅膀动力学,而不管栖木的直径和质地如何,但在触地时,脚、脚趾和爪子的运动学变得具有表面特异性。一个新的动态抓取模型,集成了我们的详细测量,揭示了鸟类如何稳定它们的抓地力。它们将可预测的脚趾垫摩擦力与爪子的概率摩擦力结合起来,当它们能挤压得更少时,爪子会拖动以找到表面的凸起部分——进一步拖动。值得注意的是,长尾鹦鹉的爪子可以在适度滑的表面上进行超快的运动,在 1-2 毫秒内,以找到更安全的凸起部分。通过这种策略,它们首先通过挤压来提高安全裕度,然后再放松抓地力。该模型还表明,当需要相对于法向力的高摩擦力时,由于爪子可以找到更多可用的表面,因此对于稳定的栖息来说,体型小是有利的,但当需要的摩擦力减小时,这种趋势就会逆转。这解释了为什么许多动物和机器人可以可靠地抓住复杂的表面。