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13 May 2022 Understanding Australia’s unique hopping species: a comparative review of the musculoskeletal system and locomotor biomechanics in Macropodoidea
Lauren H. Thornton, Taylor J. M. Dick, Mike B. Bennett, Christofer J. Clemente
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Kangaroos and other macropodoids stand out among mammals for their unusual hopping locomotion and body shape. This review examines the scaling of hind- and forelimb bones, and the primary ankle extensor muscles and tendons. We find that the scaling of the musculoskeletal system is sensitive to the phylogenetic context. Tibia length increases with positive allometry among most macropodoids, but negative allometry in eastern grey kangaroos and isometry in red kangaroos. Femur length decreases with stronger negative allometry in eastern grey and red kangaroos than among other macropodoids. Muscle masses scale with negative allometry in western grey kangaroos and with isometry in red kangaroos, compared to positive allometry in other macropodoids. We further summarise the work on the hopping gait, energetics in macropodoids, and stresses in the musculoskeletal system in an evolutionary context, to determine what trade-offs may limit locomotor performance in macropodoids. When large kangaroos hop, they do not increase oxygen consumption with speed, unlike most mammals, including small hopping species. We conclude that there is not enough information to isolate the biomechanical factors that make large kangaroos so energy efficient. We identify key areas for further research to fill these gaps.

Lauren H. Thornton, Taylor J. M. Dick, Mike B. Bennett, and Christofer J. Clemente "Understanding Australia’s unique hopping species: a comparative review of the musculoskeletal system and locomotor biomechanics in Macropodoidea," Australian Journal of Zoology 69(4), 136-157, (13 May 2022). https://doi.org/10.1071/ZO21048
Received: 8 November 2021; Accepted: 5 April 2022; Published: 13 May 2022
KEYWORDS
bone
Efficiency
gait
locomotion
macropod
muscle
saltation
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