从如此之高的地方底物高度和风险认知对狐猴运动力学的影响。

IF 1.7 2区 生物学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY American Journal of Biological Anthropology Pub Date : 2024-02-27 DOI:10.1002/ajpa.24917
Nicole M. Schapker, Judith Janisch, Lydia C. Myers, Taylor Phelps, Liza J. Shapiro, Jesse W. Young
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:树栖运动中的意外事故可能会导致高空坠落的危险,但灵长类作为善于树栖的动物,在多大程度上会根据在树冠高支撑物上运动的风险感知而改变运动方式,目前仍不清楚。通过在较高的基质上使用更稳定的运动方式,灵长类动物可能会避免潜在的致命后果:我们使用高速摄像机记录了四种野生狐猴的四足运动--Eulemur rubriventer、Eulemur rufifrons、Hapalemur aureus和Lemur catta(N = 113步)。我们利用遥感器对运动支撑物的高度、直径和角度方向进行了量化,并测试了支撑物参数对步态运动学的影响,特别是预测在基质高度增加的情况下,狐猴会降低速度和步频,但会增加步长和支撑肢的平均数量:结果:狐猴在不同高度的基质上不会调整步频。随着高度的变化,狐猴对速度、步长和支撑肢平均数量的调整往往与预测相反。只有E. rubriventer在较高的基质上降低了速度并增加了支撑肢的平均数量:讨论:研究结果表明,四足行走对狐猴来说是一种相对安全的运动方式,在较高的基质上,也就是潜在风险较高的基质上,需要步态的微妙变化来增加稳定性。继续研究高度对运动的影响对于确定动物如何评估环境中的风险以及它们如何选择利用这些信息来更安全地运动非常重要。
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From such great heights: The effects of substrate height and the perception of risk on lemur locomotor mechanics

Objectives

An accident during arboreal locomotion can lead to risky falls, but it remains unclear that the extent to which primates, as adept arborealists, change their locomotion in response to the perceived risk of moving on high supports in the tree canopy. By using more stable forms of locomotion on higher substrates, primates might avoid potentially fatal consequences.

Materials and Methods

Using high-speed cameras, we recorded the quadrupedal locomotion of four wild lemur species—Eulemur rubriventer, Eulemur rufifrons, Hapalemur aureus, and Lemur catta (N = 113 total strides). We quantified the height, diameter, and angular orientation of locomotor supports using remote sensors and tested the influence of support parameters on gait kinematics, specifically predicting that in response to increasing substrate height, lemurs would decrease speed and stride frequency, but increase stride length and the mean number of supporting limbs.

Results

Lemurs did not adjust stride frequency on substrates of varying height. Adjustments to speed, stride length, and the mean number of supporting limbs in response to varying height often ran counter to predictions. Only E. rubriventer decreased speed and increased the mean number of supporting limbs on higher substrates.

Discussion

Results suggest that quadrupedal walking is a relatively safe form of locomotion for lemurs, requiring subtle changes in gait to increase stability on higher—that is, potentially riskier—substrates. Continued investigation of the impact of height on locomotion will be important to determine how animals assess risk in their environment and how they choose to use this information to move more safely.

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