Date: September 16, 2016
Source: Brown University
New research on grasshoppers and
bullfrogs offers a conclusion about jumping: When an animal has less time to
store energy for a jump, it needs a less stiff tendon than one that can take
its time.
A new research paper tells a
story of the grasshopper and the bullfrog, but it's no children's tale.
Instead, it describes biomechanical simulations that help to explain why the
two jumping animals have very different stiffnesses in the springs -- tendons
in the frogs and tendon counterparts called apodemes in the grasshoppers --
that store energy for their leaps. The difference, the science suggests, is the
time they typically take before they take off.
"Our simulation is in line
with the hypothesis that spring stiffness varies among organisms according to
their jumps -- whether they are time-limited or non-time-limited," said Michael
Rosario, a Brown University postdoctoral fellow and lead author of the study in
the Proceedings of the Royal Society B.
Scientists already knew that the
key spring in the grasshopper (the apodeme and part of its exoskeleton) has
more than twice the stiffness as the analogous tendon in the bullfrog. By
simulating the muscle-spring systems in each creature's legs, Rosario and his
co-authors were able to show that the more time an animal has to contract
muscle to store up energy before jumping, the more energy they can store in a
relatively stiff spring.
Grasshoppers (Schistocerca
gregaria) will normally spend 300 milliseconds storing up energy in their
muscles, apodemes, and exoskeletons, although they have to jump more quickly,
and perhaps less efficiently, to evade predators. Bullfrogs (Lithobates
catesbeiana), on the other hand, normally spend only 50 milliseconds before
making a leap, for instance to pounce toward prey. The simulations showed the
greatest energy storage for a quick jump like that of the bullfrog was in a
less stiff spring, while for the grasshopper's timeframe it was in a stiffer
spring.
In other words, the creatures
have the spring stiffness they should, given the time constraints on their
typical jumping behavior.
"For both the bullfrog and
the grasshopper, the time available for muscle contraction determined which
spring stiffness permitted maximal energy storage," wrote Rosario and
colleagues at Duke University (where he did most of the research before
completing it at Brown), the University of Bristol, North Carolina State
University and the University of North Carolina.
Rosario and his colleagues argue
that the paper may help predict muscle and tendon properties for other
organisms, including mammals. Further research, which Rosario is conducting in
the lab of Brown University Professor Thomas Roberts, will determine whether
that's too much of a leap.
In addition to Rosario, the
paper's other authors are Gregory Sutton at Bristol, Sheila Patek at Duke and
Gregory Sawicki in North Carolina.
Story Source:
Materials provided by Brown
University. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.
Journal Reference:
M. V. Rosario, G. P. Sutton, S.
N. Patek, G. S. Sawicki. Muscle–spring dynamics in time-limited, elastic
movements. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 2016; 283
(1838): 20161561 DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2016.1561
No comments:
Post a Comment
You only need to enter your comment once! Comments will appear once they have been moderated. This is so as to stop the would-be comedian who has been spamming the comments here with inane and often offensive remarks. You know who you are!