International audienceAn understanding of the proximate (morphological, physiological and behavioural) mechanisms that affect locomotor speed can clarify reasons for intraspecific and interspecific variation in this ecologically relevant performance measure. To explore such mechanisms, we selected a study system involving animals with highly simplified external morphology (snakes) moving through a homogeneous medium (water). In laboratory trials, swimming speeds in two species of amphibious sea kraits (61 Laticauda laticaudata and 35 L. saintgironsi) varied from 0.14 to 1.39 body lengths per second. Miniature accelerometers attached externally to these snakes recorded the frequency and lateral acceleration of bodily undulations that the sna...
Semiaquatic and terrestrial mammals frequently have to cross or move along water bodies, both trying...
Central to our understanding of locomotion in fishes are the performance implications of using diffe...
Most animals need to move to find food, escape predators or reproduce. Therefore, locomotion shapes ...
International audienceAn understanding of the proximate (morphological, physiological and behavioura...
Amphibious animals may be subject to strong but conflicting selective pressures to enhance locomotor...
During anguilliform swimming at the surface, four half waves are present along the body of the yello...
Transient locomotion under water is highly constrained by drag and added mass, yet some aquatic snak...
Natural selection favors organisms that are the most successful in fitness-related behaviors such as...
It is obvious, at least qualitatively, that small animals move their locomotory apparatus faster tha...
Underwater snake robots offer many interesting capabilities for underwater operations. The long and ...
The movement of limbless terrestrial animals differs fundamentally from that of limbed animals, yet ...
Sustained swimming ability can play a critical role in the ecology of fishes, particularly in terms ...
The kinematics of swimming in larval Xenopus laevis has been studied using computer-assisted analysi...
The main subject of this study was the swimming behaviour of upriver migrating sea lamprey, Petromyz...
High-speed motion pictures have enabled us to study the swimming movements of Bosmina Zongirostris. ...
Semiaquatic and terrestrial mammals frequently have to cross or move along water bodies, both trying...
Central to our understanding of locomotion in fishes are the performance implications of using diffe...
Most animals need to move to find food, escape predators or reproduce. Therefore, locomotion shapes ...
International audienceAn understanding of the proximate (morphological, physiological and behavioura...
Amphibious animals may be subject to strong but conflicting selective pressures to enhance locomotor...
During anguilliform swimming at the surface, four half waves are present along the body of the yello...
Transient locomotion under water is highly constrained by drag and added mass, yet some aquatic snak...
Natural selection favors organisms that are the most successful in fitness-related behaviors such as...
It is obvious, at least qualitatively, that small animals move their locomotory apparatus faster tha...
Underwater snake robots offer many interesting capabilities for underwater operations. The long and ...
The movement of limbless terrestrial animals differs fundamentally from that of limbed animals, yet ...
Sustained swimming ability can play a critical role in the ecology of fishes, particularly in terms ...
The kinematics of swimming in larval Xenopus laevis has been studied using computer-assisted analysi...
The main subject of this study was the swimming behaviour of upriver migrating sea lamprey, Petromyz...
High-speed motion pictures have enabled us to study the swimming movements of Bosmina Zongirostris. ...
Semiaquatic and terrestrial mammals frequently have to cross or move along water bodies, both trying...
Central to our understanding of locomotion in fishes are the performance implications of using diffe...
Most animals need to move to find food, escape predators or reproduce. Therefore, locomotion shapes ...