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Dynamics of horizontal walking and vertical climbing in the Australian green tree frog (Ranoidea caerulea).

Melody W YoungNicholas D FlaimJohnathan YarbroAshwin RagupathiNavjot GuruEdwin DickinsonMichael C Granatosky
Published in: The Journal of experimental biology (2023)
Despite the high mechanical demands associated with climbing, the ability to ascend vertically has evolved independently in most major animal lineages. However, little is known about the kinetics, mechanical energy profiles, or spatiotemporal gait characteristics of this locomotor mode. In this study, we explore the dynamics of horizontal locomotion and vertical climbing on both flat substrates and narrow poles in five Australian green tree frogs (Ranoidea caerulea). Vertical climbing is associated with slow, deliberate movements (i.e., reduced speed and stride frequency and increased duty factors) and propulsive fore-aft impulses in both the forelimb and hindlimb. By comparison, horizontal walking was characterize by a braking forelimb and a propulsive hindlimb. In the normal plane, tree frogs mirrored other taxa in exhibiting a net pulling forelimb and a net pushing hindlimb. In terms of mechanical energy, tree frogs matched theoretical predictions of climbing dynamics (i.e., the total mechanical energetic cost of vertical climbing was predominantly driven by potential energy, with negligible kinetic contributions). Utilizing power as a means for estimating efficiency, we also demonstrate that Australian green tree frogs show total mechanical power costs only slightly above the minimum mechanical power necessary to climb, highlighting their highly effective locomotor mechanics. This study provides new data on climbing dynamics in a slow-moving arboreal tetrapod and raises new testable hypotheses about how natural selection can act upon a locomotor behavior that is notably constrained by external physical forces.
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