Higham Lab

University of California, Riverside

Jumping with adhesion: landing surface incline alters impact force and body kinematics in crested geckos


Journal article


T. Higham, M. Hofmann, Michelle Modert, M. Thielen, T. Speck
Scientific Reports, 2021

Semantic Scholar DOI PubMedCentral PubMed
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APA   Click to copy
Higham, T., Hofmann, M., Modert, M., Thielen, M., & Speck, T. (2021). Jumping with adhesion: landing surface incline alters impact force and body kinematics in crested geckos. Scientific Reports.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Higham, T., M. Hofmann, Michelle Modert, M. Thielen, and T. Speck. “Jumping with Adhesion: Landing Surface Incline Alters Impact Force and Body Kinematics in Crested Geckos.” Scientific Reports (2021).


MLA   Click to copy
Higham, T., et al. “Jumping with Adhesion: Landing Surface Incline Alters Impact Force and Body Kinematics in Crested Geckos.” Scientific Reports, 2021.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{t2021a,
  title = {Jumping with adhesion: landing surface incline alters impact force and body kinematics in crested geckos},
  year = {2021},
  journal = {Scientific Reports},
  author = {Higham, T. and Hofmann, M. and Modert, Michelle and Thielen, M. and Speck, T.}
}

Abstract

Arboreal habitats are characterized by a complex three-dimensional array of branches that vary in numerous characteristics, including incline, compliance, roughness, and diameter. Gaps must often be crossed, and this is frequently accomplished by leaping. Geckos bearing an adhesive system often jump in arboreal habitats, although few studies have examined their jumping biomechanics. We investigated the biomechanics of landing on smooth surfaces in crested geckos, Correlophus ciliatus, asking whether the incline of the landing platform alters impact forces and mid-air body movements. Using high-speed videography, we examined jumps from a horizontal take-off platform to horizontal, 45° and 90° landing platforms. Take-off velocity was greatest when geckos were jumping to a horizontal platform. Geckos did not modulate their body orientation in the air. Body curvature during landing, and landing duration, were greatest on the vertical platform. Together, these significantly reduced the impact force on the vertical platform. When landing on a smooth vertical surface, the geckos must engage the adhesive system to prevent slipping and falling. In contrast, landing on a horizontal surface requires no adhesion, but incurs high impact forces. Despite a lack of mid-air modulation, geckos appear robust to changing landing conditions.