Biomechanical and morphological determinants of maximal jumping performance in callitrichine monkeys.
Grégoire Boulinguez-AmbroiseDoug M BoyerNoah T DunhamGabriel S YapuncichMadison Bradley-CronkwrightAngel ZeiningerDaniel SchmittJesse Wyatt YoungPublished in: The Journal of experimental biology (2024)
Jumping is a crucial behavior in fitness-critical activities including locomotion, resource acquisition, courtship displays, and predator avoidance. In primates, paleontological evidence suggests selection for enhanced jumping ability during their early evolution. However, our interpretation of the fossil record remains limited, as no studies have explicitly linked levels of jumping performance with interspecific skeletal variation. We used force platform analyses to generate biomechanical data on maximal jumping performance in three genera of callitrichine monkeys falling along a continuum of jumping propensity: Callimico (relatively high propensity jumper), Saguinus (intermediate jumping propensity), and Callithrix (relatively low propensity jumper). Individuals performed vertical jumps to perches of increasing height within a custom-built tower. We coupled performance data with high-resolution μCT data quantifying bony features thought to reflect jumping ability. Levels of maximal performance between species - e.g., maximal takeoff velocity of the center of mass (CoM) - parallel established gradients of jumping propensity. Both biomechanical analysis of jumping performance determinants (e.g., CoM displacement, maximal force production, peak mechanical power during push-off) and multivariate analyses of bony hindlimb morphology highlight different mechanical strategies among taxa. For instance, Callimico, which has relatively long hindlimbs, followed a strategy of fully extending of the limbs to maximize CoM displacement - rather than force production - during push-off. In contrast, relatively shorter-limbed Callithrix depended mostly on relatively high push-off forces. Overall, these results suggest that leaping performance is at least partially associated with correlated anatomical and behavioral adaptations, suggesting the possibility of better inferring performance from the fossil record.
Keyphrases
- heart rate
- resistance training
- high resolution
- electronic health record
- single molecule
- big data
- computed tomography
- magnetic resonance
- magnetic resonance imaging
- body mass index
- data analysis
- high intensity
- blood pressure
- high throughput
- single cell
- machine learning
- artificial intelligence
- image quality
- finite element
- finite element analysis