During evolutionary reinvasions of water by terrestrial vertebrates, ancestrally tubular limb bones often flatten to form flippers. Differences in skeletal loading between land and water might have facilitated such changes. In turtles, femoral shear strains are significantly lower during swimming than during walking, potentially allowing a release from loads favoring tubular shafts. However, flipper-like morphology in specialized tetrapod swimmers is most accentuated in the forelimbs. To test if the forelimbs of turtles also experience reduced torsional loading in water, we compared strains on the humerus of river cooters (Pseudemys concinna) between swimming and terrestrial walking. Humeral shear strains are also lower during swimming comp...
Testudines are susceptible to inversion and self-right using their necks, limbs, or both, to generat...
The lifestyle of extinct tetrapods is often difficult to assess when clear morphological adaptations...
Hydrodynamic stability is the ability to resist recoil motions of the body produced by destabilizing...
During evolutionary reinvasions of water by terrestrial vertebrates, ancestrally tubular limb bones ...
Members of several terrestrial vertebrate lineages have returned to nearly exclusive use of aquatic ...
The transition from aquatic to terrestrial habitats was an event in vertebrate evolution that preced...
Specialization for a new habitat often entails a cost to performance in the ancestral habitat. Altho...
SUMMARY Studies of limb bone loading during terrestrial locomotion have focused primarily on birds a...
Turtles are an iconic lineage in studies of animal locomotion, typifying the use of slow, alternatin...
Variations in musculoskeletal lever systems have formed an important foundation for predictions abou...
Transitions between water and land have occurred multiple times in vertebrate evolutionary history. ...
Previous analyses of ground reaction force (GRF) and kinematic data from river cooter turtles (Pseud...
March 18-19, 2013Sea turtles spend most of their lives in marine habitats, but they require a terres...
The concept of the adaptive landscape has been invaluable to evolutionary biologists for visualizing...
Novel locomotor functions in animals may evolve through changes in morphology, muscle activity, or a...
Testudines are susceptible to inversion and self-right using their necks, limbs, or both, to generat...
The lifestyle of extinct tetrapods is often difficult to assess when clear morphological adaptations...
Hydrodynamic stability is the ability to resist recoil motions of the body produced by destabilizing...
During evolutionary reinvasions of water by terrestrial vertebrates, ancestrally tubular limb bones ...
Members of several terrestrial vertebrate lineages have returned to nearly exclusive use of aquatic ...
The transition from aquatic to terrestrial habitats was an event in vertebrate evolution that preced...
Specialization for a new habitat often entails a cost to performance in the ancestral habitat. Altho...
SUMMARY Studies of limb bone loading during terrestrial locomotion have focused primarily on birds a...
Turtles are an iconic lineage in studies of animal locomotion, typifying the use of slow, alternatin...
Variations in musculoskeletal lever systems have formed an important foundation for predictions abou...
Transitions between water and land have occurred multiple times in vertebrate evolutionary history. ...
Previous analyses of ground reaction force (GRF) and kinematic data from river cooter turtles (Pseud...
March 18-19, 2013Sea turtles spend most of their lives in marine habitats, but they require a terres...
The concept of the adaptive landscape has been invaluable to evolutionary biologists for visualizing...
Novel locomotor functions in animals may evolve through changes in morphology, muscle activity, or a...
Testudines are susceptible to inversion and self-right using their necks, limbs, or both, to generat...
The lifestyle of extinct tetrapods is often difficult to assess when clear morphological adaptations...
Hydrodynamic stability is the ability to resist recoil motions of the body produced by destabilizing...