Abstract
Escaping from predators often demands that animals rapidly negotiate complex environments. The smallest animals attain relatively fast speeds with high frequency leg cycling, wing flapping or body undulations, but absolute speeds are slow compared to larger animals. Instead, small animals benefit from the advantages of enhanced maneuverability in part due to scaling. Here, we report a novel behavior in small, legged runners that may facilitate their escape by disappearance from predators. We video recorded cockroaches and geckos rapidly running up an incline toward a ledge, digitized their motion and created a simple model to generalize the behavior. Both species ran rapidly at 12-15 body lengths-per-second toward the ledge without braking, dove off the ledge, attached their feet by claws like a grappling hook, and used a pendulum-like motion that can exceed one meter-per-second to swing around to an inverted position under the ledge, out of sight. We discovered geckos in Southeast Asia can execute this escape behavior in the field. Quantification of these acrobatic behaviors provides biological inspiration toward the design of small, highly mobile search-and-rescue robots that can assist us during natural and human-made disasters. We report the first steps toward this new capability in a small, hexapedal robot.
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Authors
Mongeau JM, McRae B, Jusufi A, Birkmeyer P, Hoover AM, Fearing R, Full RJ
Institution
Biophysics Graduate Group, University of California, Berkeley, California, United States of America. jmmongeau@berkeley.edu
Source
PloS one 7:6 2012 pg e38003MeSH
AnimalsBiomechanics
Body Size
Cockroaches
Escape Reaction
Lizards
Locomotion
Robotics
Video Recording
Pub Type(s)
Journal ArticleResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.
Language
eng
PubMed ID
22701594
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