Logo image
Moving in complex environments: a biomechanical analysis of locomotion on inclined and narrow substrates
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Moving in complex environments: a biomechanical analysis of locomotion on inclined and narrow substrates

Christofer J Clemente, Taylor J M Dick, Rebecca Wheatley, Joshua Gaschk, Ami Fadhillah Amir Abdul Nasir, Skye F Cameron and Robbie S Wilson
Journal of Experimental Biology, Vol.222(6), pp.1-10
2019

Abstract

performance Northern quoll torque ground reaction force kinematics kinetics
Characterisation of an organism's performance in different habitats provides insight into the conditions that allow it to survive and reproduce. In recent years, Northern quolls (Dasyurus hallucatus)-a medium-sized semi-arboreal marsupial native to northern Australia-have undergone significant population declines within open forest, woodland and riparian habitats, but less so in rocky areas. To help understand this decline, we quantified the biomechanical performance of wild Northern quolls as they ran up inclined narrow (13 mm pole) and inclined wide (90 mm platform) substrates. We predicted that quolls may possess biomechanical adaptations to increase stability on narrow surfaces, which are more common in rocky habitats. Our results display that quolls have some biomechanical characteristics consistent with a stability advantage on narrow surfaces. This includes the coupled use of limb pairs, as indicated via a decrease in footfall time, and an ability to produce corrective torques to counteract the toppling moments commonly encountered during gait on narrow surfaces. However, speed was constrained on narrow surfaces, and quolls did not adopt diagonal sequence gaits unlike true arboreal specialists such as primates. In comparison with key predators, such as cats and dogs, Northern quolls appear inferior in terrestrial environments but have a stability advantage at higher speeds on narrow supports. This may partially explain the heterogenous declines in Northern quoll populations among various habitats on mainland Australia.

Details

Metrics

2 File views/ downloads
337 Record Views

InCites Highlights

These are selected metrics from InCites Benchmarking & Analytics tool, related to this output

Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
Web Of Science research areas
Biology
Zoology

UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

This output has contributed to the advancement of the following goals:

#13 Climate Action
#15 Life on Land

Source: InCites

Logo image