Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology, University of Connecticut, 75 N. Eagleville Road, Unit 3043, Storrs, CT 06269-3043, USA.
Department of Biological Sciences, California State University, San Marcos 333 S. Twin Oaks Valley Road, San Marcos, CA 92096, USA.
J Exp Biol. 2024 Apr 15;227(9). doi: 10.1242/jeb.246555. Epub 2024 May 10.
Differences in the physical and behavioral attributes of prey are likely to impose disparate demands of force and speed on the jaws of a predator. Because of biomechanical trade-offs between force and speed, this presents an interesting conundrum for predators of diverse prey types. Loggerhead shrikes (Lanius ludovicianus) are medium-sized (∼50 g) passeriform birds that dispatch and feed on a variety of arthropod and vertebrate prey, primarily using their beaks. We used high-speed video of shrikes biting a force transducer in lateral view to obtain corresponding measurements of bite force, upper and lower bill linear and angular displacements, and velocities. Our results show that upper bill depression (about the craniofacial hinge) is more highly correlated with bite force, whereas lower bill elevation is more highly correlated with jaw-closing velocity. These results suggest that the upper and lower jaws might play different roles for generating force and speed (respectively) in these and perhaps other birds as well. We hypothesize that a division of labor between the jaws may allow shrikes to capitalize on elements of force and speed without compromising performance. As expected on theoretical grounds, bite force trades-off against jaw-closing velocity during the act of biting, although peak bite force and jaw-closing velocity across individual shrikes show no clear signs of a force-velocity trade-off. As a result, shrikes appear to bite with jaw-closing velocities and forces that maximize biting power, which may be selectively advantageous for predators of diverse prey that require both jaw-closing force and speed.
猎物在物理和行为属性上的差异,很可能对捕食者的下颚造成不同的力量和速度需求。由于力量和速度之间存在生物力学权衡,这对捕食不同猎物类型的捕食者来说是一个有趣的难题。红尾伯劳(Lanius ludovicianus)是一种中等大小(约 50 克)的雀形目鸟类,主要通过喙捕食各种节肢动物和脊椎动物猎物。我们使用侧视图中的高速视频记录伯劳鸟咬力传感器的情况,以获得相应的咬合力、上下喙的线性和角度位移以及速度测量值。我们的研究结果表明,上喙的凹陷(大约在颅面关节处)与咬合力的相关性更高,而下喙的抬起与下颌闭合速度的相关性更高。这些结果表明,在上颌和下颌中,可能在其他鸟类中也是如此,这两个部位可能在产生力量和速度方面发挥不同的作用。我们假设,在捕食者中,上下颌之间的分工可能允许捕食者在不影响性能的情况下利用力量和速度的元素。从理论上讲,在咬的过程中,咬合力与下颌闭合速度之间存在权衡,尽管单个伯劳鸟的最大咬合力和下颌闭合速度没有明显的力量-速度权衡迹象。因此,伯劳鸟似乎以最大咬合力的下颌闭合速度进行咬击,这可能对需要下颌闭合力和速度的多种猎物的捕食者具有选择性优势。