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Don’t break a leg: running birds from quail to ostrich prioritise leg safety and economy on uneven terrain

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

Field Value
Title Don’t break a leg: running birds from quail to ostrich prioritise leg safety and economy on uneven terrain
Names Birn-Jeffery, Aleksandra V. (creator)
Hubicki, Christian M. (creator)
Blum, Yvonne (creator)
Renjewski, Daniel (creator)
Hurst, Jonathan W. (creator)
Daley, Monica A. (creator)
Date Issued 2014-11-01 (iso8601)
Note This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by the Company of Biologists Ltd and can be found at: http://jeb.biologists.org/.
Abstract Cursorial ground birds are paragons of bipedal running that span a
500-fold mass range from quail to ostrich. Here we investigate the
task-level control priorities of cursorial birds by analysing how they
negotiate single-step obstacles that create a conflict between body
stability (attenuating deviations in body motion) and consistent leg
force–length dynamics (for economy and leg safety). We also test the
hypothesis that control priorities shift between body stability and leg
safety with increasing body size, reflecting use of active control to
overcome size-related challenges. Weight-support demands lead to
a shift towards straighter legs and stiffer steady gait with increasing
body size, but it remains unknown whether non-steady locomotor
priorities diverge with size. We found that all measured species used
a consistent obstacle negotiation strategy, involving unsteady body
dynamics to minimise fluctuations in leg posture and loading across
multiple steps, not directly prioritising body stability. Peak leg forces
remained remarkably consistent across obstacle terrain, within 0.35
body weights of level running for obstacle heights from 0.1 to 0.5
times leg length. All species used similar stance leg actuation
patterns, involving asymmetric force–length trajectories and posture-dependent
actuation to add or remove energy depending on landing
conditions. We present a simple stance leg model that explains key
features of avian bipedal locomotion, and suggests economy as a
key priority on both level and uneven terrain. We suggest that running
ground birds target the closely coupled priorities of economy and leg
safety as the direct imperatives of control, with adequate stability
achieved through appropriately tuned intrinsic dynamics.
Genre Article
Access Condition http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/us/
Topic Bipedal running
Identifier Birn-Jeffery, A. V., Hubicki, C. M., Blum, Y., Renjewski, D., Hurst, J. W., & Daley, M. A. (2014). Don't break a leg: running birds from quail to ostrich prioritise leg safety and economy on uneven terrain. Journal of Experimental Biology, 217(21), 3786-3796. doi:10.1242/​jeb.102640

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