Publication | Closed Access
Further Studies of Crayfish Escape Behaviour : I. The Role of the Appendages and the Stereotyped Nature of Non-Giant Escape Swimming
157
Citations
12
References
1985
Year
EngineeringFitnessMedial Giant FlipsPredator-prey InteractionLocomotion (Cellular Biology)AnatomyComparative AnatomyLocomotor PerformanceMyriapodaBiomechanicsInterspecific Behavioral InteractionFurther StudiesMorphological EvidenceAvian LocomotionMorphologyMorphogenesisInvertebrate VisionLocomotion (Animal Biomechanics)Crayfish Escape BehaviourUropod ProtopoditesBiologyFlexible Organism BiomechanicsPattern FormationEvolutionary BiologyNon-giant Escape SwimmingAnimal LocomotionEscape BehaviourAquatic OrganismMedicineAnimal Behavior
ABSTRACT High-speed cinematography of the escape behaviour of freelymoving crayfish showed that the thoracic and abdominal appendages exhibit stereotyped movements in giant axon-mediated tail flips and in non-giant flips. Three distinct classes of non-giant tail flips were recognized in this study: linear, pitching and twisting flips. In medial giant flips and linear non-giant flips the chelipeds and pereiopods were promoted and extended in a manner which minimized the hydrodynamic resistance of the animal. The exopodites of the uropods were promoted. In lateral giant flips and pitching non-giant flips the thoracic appendages moved only passively. The uropod protopodites were promoted but the exopodites remained remoted. When giant axon-mediated tailflips were elicited with natural stimuli they were followed by sequences of non-giant flips which appeared quite stereotyped.
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