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The private life of echidnas: using accelerometery and GPS to examine field biomechanics and assess the ecological impact of a widespread, semi-fossorial monotreme
Abstract   Peer reviewed

The private life of echidnas: using accelerometery and GPS to examine field biomechanics and assess the ecological impact of a widespread, semi-fossorial monotreme

Christofer J Clemente, C E Cooper, P C Withers, C Freakley, C Singh and P Terrill
Integrative and Comparative Biology, Vol.57(Supplement 21), p.e227
Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology (SICB) Annual Meeting, 2017 (New Orleans, United States, 04-Jan-2017–08-Jan-2017)
2017
url
https://doi.org/10.1093/icb/icx001View
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Abstract

Zoology Ecology Biochemistry and Cell Biology GPS accelerometery echidnas ecological impact biomechanics
The short-beaked echidna (Tachyglossus aculeatus), being a monotreme, provides a unique combination of phylogenetic history, morphological differentiation and ecological specialization for a mammal. The echidna has a unique appendicular skeleton, a highly-specialized myrmecophagous life-style and a mode of locomotion that is neither typically mammalian nor reptilian but retains aspects of both lineages. We therefore were interested in the interactions of locomotor biomechanics, ecology and movements for wild, free-living short-beaked echidnas. To assess locomotion in its complex natural environment, we attached both GPS and accelerometer loggers to the back of echidnas in both spring and summer. We found that the locomotor biomechanics of echidnas is unique, with lower stride length and stride frequency than reported for similar sized mammals. Speed modulation is primarily accomplished through changes in stride frequency, with a mean of 1.39 Hz and a maximum of 2.31 Hz. Daily activity period was linked to ambient air temperature, which restricted daytime activity during the hotter summer months. Echidnas had longer activity periods and longer digging bouts in spring compared to summer. In summer, echidnas had higher walking speeds than in spring, perhaps because of the shorter time suitable for activity. Echidnas spend, on average, 12% of their time digging, which indicates their potential to excavate up to 204 m3 of soil a year. This information highlights the important contribution towards ecosystem health, via bioturbation, of this widespread Australian monotreme.

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