By Elizabeth Preston February 5,
2016 Discover Magazine Inkfish Blog
For videos go to http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/inkfish/2016/02/05/four-legs-good-two-legs-better-for-hurdling-obstacles/#.Vr4rwnBiCDM
Although lizards mostly scurry
on all fours, certain species can run on two legs when the mood strikes.
What’s the benefit to this human-like running style? For one thing, it seems to
let lizards get over obstacles without slowing down. They just have to make
sure not to tip over.
Georgia Southern University biologist
Lance McBrayer and graduate student Seth Parker studied running in a handsome
little reptile called Sceloporus woodi, or the Florida scrub lizard. McBrayer says there’s
been a lot of research into lizard species that always run on two feet.
But lizards that switch between a two- and four-legged stance while
running are more mysterious. Some scientists have suggested that it’s
just a product of the lizards’ long bodies and acceleration—in other
words, that they’re forced up onto their back legs like an airplane
near the end of its runway.
McBrayer and Parker trapped four dozen
wild lizards from the Ocala National Forest in Florida . They brought the lizards, all male,
back to the lab. There, they put the lizards onto a miniature, rectangular
racetrack. The track was built out of wood, with packed sand on its floor.
Some lizards simply ran down this
course while a high-speed camera recorded their steps. Other lizards had
to contend with obstacles. The researchers added either one or two little
wooden barriers along the length of the track. The lizards weren’t
naturally motivated athletes, though. Researchers had to chase them down
the track, clapping their hands or tapping the lizards’ tails to keep them
moving. If a lizard managed to sprint a full meter without stopping, the
researchers counted it as a success.
Lizards that used a two-legged stride
during their run down an obstacle course finished faster
than lizards that only ran on four legs. Lizards that used two legs were
also more likely to clear an obstacle without stepping on it. When they
ran bipedally, the lizards held their long tails out low, for balance.
McBrayer says the results suggest that
Florida scrub
lizards are in control of when they run on two legs. It’s not just an
involuntary byproduct of going fast. In other research, he says, he’s seen that
the lizards use a distinctive step pattern when clearing an obstacle on
two legs—not unlike a human hurdler during a race.
Running on two legs when they feel like
it may let Florida
scrub lizards sprint through cluttered environments quickly and
efficiently. Meanwhile, this lizard is just showing off:
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