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Body and tail-assisted pitch control facilitates bipedal locomotion in Australian agamid lizards
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Body and tail-assisted pitch control facilitates bipedal locomotion in Australian agamid lizards

Christofer J Clemente and Nicholas C Wu
Journal of the Royal Society Interface, Vol.15(146)
2018
url
https://doi.org/10.1098/rsif.2018.0276View
Published Version

Abstract

destabilization bio-inspiration exaptation ground reaction force
Certain lizards are known to run bipedally. Modelling studies suggest bipedalism in lizards may be a consequence of a caudal shift in the body centre of mass, combined With quick bursts of acceleration, causing a torque moment at the hip lifting the front of the body. However, some lizards appear to run bipedally sooner and for longer than expected from these models, suggesting positive selection for bipedal locomotion. While difference; in in morphology may contribute to bipedal locomotion, change; n kinematic variables may also contribute to extended bipedal sequences, such as changes to the body orientation, tail lifting and changes to the round reaction force profile. We examined these mechanisms among eight Australian agamid lizards. Our analysis revealed that angular acceleration of the trunk about the hip, and of the tail about the hip were both Important predictors of extended bipedal running, along with increased temporal asymmetry of the ground reaction force profile. These results highlight important dynamic movements during locomotion, which may tot only stabilize bipedal strides, but also to de-stabilize quadrupedal strides in agamid lizards, in order to temporarily switch to, and extend a bipedal sequence.

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Zoology

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#15 Life on Land

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