Abstract

Take-off is a critical phase of flight, and many birds jump to take to the air. Although the actuation of the hindlimb in terrestrial birds is not limited to the sagittal plane, and considerable non-sagittal plane motion has been observed during take-off jumps, how the spatial arrangement of hindlimb muscles in flying birds facilitates such jumps has received little attention. This study aims to ascertain the 3D hip muscle function in the magpie (Pica pica), a bird known to jump to take-off. A musculoskeletal model of the magpie hindlimb was developed using μCT scans (isotropic resolution of 18.2 μm) to derive bone surfaces, while the 3D muscle path definition was further informed by the literature. Function was robustly characterized by determining the 3D moment-generating capacity of 14 hip muscles over the functional joint range of motion during a take-off leap considering variations across the attachment areas and uncertainty in dynamic muscle geometry. Ratios of peak flexion-extension (FE) to internal-external rotation (IER) and abduction-adduction (ABD) moment-generating capacity were indicators of muscle function. Analyses of 972 variations of the 3D muscle paths showed that 11 of 14 muscles can act as either flexor or extensor, while all 14 muscles demonstrated the capacity to act as internal or external rotators of the hip with the mean ratios of peak FE to IER and ABD moment-generating capacity were 0.89 and 0.31, respectively. Moment-generating capacity in IER approaching levels in the FE moment-generating capacity determined here underline that the avian hip muscle function is not limited to the sagittal plane. Together with previous findings on the 3D nature of hindlimb kinematics, our results suggest that musculoskeletal models to develop a more detailed understanding of how birds orchestrate the use of muscles during a take-off jump cannot be restricted to the sagittal plane.

Highlights

  • Take-off is a critical phase of flight, and many land birds perform some form of jump to take to the air

  • The moment-generating capacity of 14 muscles was successfully analysed over the functional hip joint range of motion (RoM) of a take-off leap for a total of 972 variations of 3D muscle paths

  • This study aimed to quantify the 3D function of the pelvic muscles of the magpie (Pica pica) based on the muscle moment-generating capacity throughout the take-off jump

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Take-off is a critical phase of flight, and many land birds perform some form of jump to take to the air. Recent work strongly indicates that the hindlimbs are a key contributor to providing the initial take-off velocity (Heppner and Anderson, 1985; Bonser and Rayner, 1996; Earls, 2000; Tobalske and Dial, 2000; Tobalske, 2004; Henry et al, 2005; Berg and Biewener, 2010; Provini et al, 2012; Chin and Lentink, 2017; Provini and Abourachid, 2018), how exactly birds use their hindlimbs to take to the air has received little attention Through their contraction, muscles act as “motors,” driving hindlimb motion, and understanding avian muscle function during the take-off jump is a first step to understand how the hindlimb contributes to taking to the air. These findings suggest that the robust identification of muscle function in the avian hindlimb requires the use of 3D comprehensive sensitivity analyses (Modenese and Kohout, 2020)

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call