Structure and Motion Laboratory, Comparative Biomedical Sciences, Royal Veterinary College, Hatfield, UK.
Geosciences Program, Queensland Museum, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.
J Anat. 2021 Aug;239(2):424-444. doi: 10.1111/joa.13431. Epub 2021 Mar 23.
We developed a three-dimensional, computational biomechanical model of a juvenile Nile crocodile (Crocodylus niloticus) pelvis and hindlimb, composed of 47 pelvic limb muscles, to investigate muscle function. We tested whether crocodiles, which are known to use a variety of limb postures during movement, use limb orientations (joint angles) that optimise the moment arms (leverages) or moment-generating capacities of their muscles during different limb postures ranging from a high walk to a sprawling motion. We also describe the three-dimensional (3D) kinematics of the crocodylian hindlimb during terrestrial locomotion across an instrumented walkway and a treadmill captured via X-ray Reconstruction of Moving Morphology (biplanar fluoroscopy; 'XROMM'). We reconstructed the 3D positions and orientations of each of the hindlimb bones and used dissection data for muscle lines of action to reconstruct a focal, subject-specific 3D musculoskeletal model. Motion data for different styles of walking (a high, crouched, bended and two types of sprawling motion) were fed into the 3D model to identify whether any joints adopted near-optimal poses for leverage across each of the behaviours. We found that (1) the hip adductors and knee extensors had their largest leverages during sprawling postures and (2) more erect postures typically involved greater peak moment arms about the hip (flexion-extension), knee (flexion) and metatarsophalangeal (flexion) joints. The results did not fully support the hypothesis that optimal poses are present during different locomotory behaviours because the peak capacities were not always reached around mid-stance phase. Furthermore, we obtained few clear trends for isometric moment-generating capacities. Therefore, perhaps peak muscular leverage in Nile crocodiles is instead reached either in early/late stance or possibly during swing phase or other locomotory behaviours that were not studied here, such as non-terrestrial movement. Alternatively, our findings could reflect a trade-off between having to execute different postures, meaning that hindlimb muscle leverage is not optimised for any singular posture or behaviour. Our model, however, provides a comprehensive set of 3D estimates of muscle actions in extant crocodiles which can form a basis for investigating muscle function in extinct archosaurs.
我们开发了一个由 47 块骨盆肢肌组成的幼年尼罗鳄(Crocodylus niloticus)骨盆和后肢的三维计算生物力学模型,以研究肌肉功能。我们测试了鳄鱼在运动中已知会使用多种肢体姿势,是否会在从高步行到伸展运动等不同的肢体姿势中使用优化肌肉力臂(杠杆)或产生能力的肢体方向(关节角度)。我们还描述了通过仪器化步道和跑步机(双平面荧光透视术;“XROMM”)捕获的陆地运动中鳄鱼后肢的三维运动学。我们重建了每条后肢骨骼的三维位置和方向,并使用肌肉作用线的解剖数据来重建一个焦点、特定于主体的三维肌肉骨骼模型。不同行走风格(高、蹲、弯曲和两种伸展运动)的运动数据被输入到 3D 模型中,以确定在每个行为中是否有任何关节采用了接近杠杆的最佳姿势。我们发现:(1)伸展姿势时,髋关节内收肌和膝关节伸肌的力臂最大;(2)更直立的姿势通常涉及髋关节(屈伸)、膝关节(屈伸)和跖趾关节(屈伸)的更大峰值力臂。结果并不完全支持在不同运动行为中存在最佳姿势的假设,因为在中间支撑阶段并不总是达到峰值容量。此外,我们获得的等长产生能力的清晰趋势很少。因此,在尼罗鳄中,峰值肌肉杠杆力可能是在早期/晚期支撑阶段达到的,或者可能是在摆动阶段或我们这里未研究的其他运动行为中达到的,例如非陆地运动。或者,我们的研究结果可能反映了不得不执行不同姿势的权衡,这意味着后肢肌肉的杠杆力没有针对任何单一姿势或行为进行优化。然而,我们的模型为研究已灭绝恐龙的肌肉功能提供了一套全面的现存鳄鱼的三维肌肉作用估计值。