Data from: A novel, bounding gait in swimming turtles: implications for aquatic locomotor diversity
Description
Turtles are an iconic lineage in studies of animal locomotion, typifying the use of slow, alternating footfalls during walking. Alternating movements of contralateral limbs are also typical during swimming gaits for most freshwater turtles. Here, we report a novel gait in turtles, in which the pleurodire Emydura subglobosa swims using a bounding gait that coordinates bilateral protraction of both forelimbs with bilateral retraction of both hindlimbs. Use of this bounding gait is correlated with increased limb excursion and decreased stride frequency, but not increased velocity when compared to standard swimming strokes. Bounding by E. subglobosa provides a second example of a non-mammalian lineage that can use bounding gaits, and may give insight into the evolution of aquatic flapping. Parallels in limb muscle fascicle properties between bounding turtles and crocodylids suggest a possible musculoskeletal mechanism underlying the use of bounding gaits in particular lineages.
Publication Date
8-14-2017
Publisher
Zenodo
DOI
10.5061/dryad.r5v8d
Document Type
Data Set
Recommended Citation
Mayerl, Christopher J.; Blob, Richard W. (2017), "Data from: A novel, bounding gait in swimming turtles: implications for aquatic locomotor diversity", Zenodo, doi: 10.5061/dryad.r5v8d
https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.r5v8d
Identifier
4993279
Embargo Date
8-14-2017
Version
1