Ingle D N, Porter M E
Department of Biological Sciences, Florida Atlantic University, 777 Glades Road, Boca Raton, FL 33431, USA.
Integr Org Biol. 2022 Jan 7;4(1):obab036. doi: 10.1093/iob/obab036. eCollection 2022.
Since their appearance in the fossil record 34 million years ago, modern cetaceans (dolphins, whales, and porpoises) have radiated into diverse habitats circumglobally, developing vast phenotypic variations among species. Traits such as skeletal morphology and ecologically linked behaviors denote swimming activity; trade-offs in flexibility and rigidity along the vertebral column determine patterns of caudal oscillation. Here, we categorized 10 species of cetaceans (families Delphinidae and Kogiidae; = 21 animals) into functional groups based on vertebral centra morphology, swimming speeds, diving behavior, and inferred swimming patterns. We quantified trabecular bone mechanical properties (yield strength, apparent stiffness, and resilience) among functional groups and regions of the vertebral column (thoracic, lumbar, and caudal). We extracted 6 mm samples from vertebral bodies and tested them in compression in 3 orientations (rostrocaudal, dorsoventral, and mediolateral) at 2 mm min. Overall, bone from the pre-fluke/fluke boundary had the greatest yield strength and resilience, indicating that the greatest forces are translated to the tail during caudal oscillatory swimming. Group 1, composed of 5 shallow-diving delphinid species, had the greatest vertebral trabecular bone yield strength, apparent stiffness, and resilience of all functional groups. Conversely, Group 3, composed of 2 deep-diving kogiid species, had the least strong, stiff, and resilient bone, while Group 2 (3 deep-diving delphinid species) exhibited intermediate values. These data suggest that species that incorporate prolonged glides during deep descents in the water column actively swim less, and place relatively smaller loads on their vertebral columns, compared with species that execute shallower dives. We found that cetacean vertebral trabecular bone properties differed from the properties of terrestrial mammals; for every given bone strength, cetacean bone was less stiff by comparison. This relative lack of material rigidity within vertebral bone may be attributed to the non-weight-bearing locomotor modes of fully aquatic mammals.
自3400万年前在化石记录中出现以来,现代鲸目动物(海豚、鲸鱼和鼠海豚)已经扩散到全球各地的不同栖息地,物种间出现了巨大的表型变异。骨骼形态和与生态相关的行为等特征表明了游泳活动;沿脊柱在灵活性和刚性之间的权衡决定了尾鳍摆动的模式。在这里,我们根据椎体形态、游泳速度、潜水行为和推断的游泳模式,将10种鲸目动物(海豚科和小抹香鲸科;n = 21只动物)分为功能组。我们对功能组以及脊柱区域(胸椎、腰椎和尾椎)的小梁骨力学性能(屈服强度、表观刚度和弹性)进行了量化。我们从椎体中提取6毫米的样本,并在每分钟2毫米的速度下,在3个方向(头尾向、背腹向和内外侧)进行压缩测试。总体而言,来自尾鳍前/尾鳍边界的骨骼具有最大的屈服强度和弹性,这表明在尾鳍摆动游泳时,最大的力被传递到了尾部。第1组由5种浅潜海豚科物种组成,在所有功能组中具有最大的椎体小梁骨屈服强度、表观刚度和弹性。相反,由2种深潜小抹香鲸科物种组成的第3组,其骨骼的强度、刚度和弹性最小,而第2组(3种深潜海豚科物种)表现出中间值。这些数据表明,与进行较浅潜水的物种相比,在水柱中深度下降期间采用长时间滑行的物种主动游泳较少,并且其脊柱承受的负荷相对较小。我们发现鲸目动物的椎体小梁骨特性与陆生哺乳动物的特性不同;对于每一个给定的骨骼强度,相比之下鲸目动物的骨骼刚度较小。椎体骨内这种相对缺乏材料刚性的情况可能归因于完全水生哺乳动物的非负重运动模式。