Relating neuromuscular control to functional anatomy of limb muscles in extant archosaurs
All muscles in vertebrate bodies are activated by electrical signals, usually from nerves. These activated muscles then contract resulting in some form of movement. The electrical signals that activate the muscles can be detected by sensitive equipment using a method known as electromyography - or EMG for short. A fancy version for just hearts is often used electrocardiogram (EKG/ECG). In humans these electrical signals can now be measured by attaching skin based electrodes, but when this technology was first being developed people would use wires attached to needles they would inject into the muscle. However, these methods don't tend to work easily for lots of animals: skin based electrodes need clean, moistened, thin skin; needles need animals obliging to leave them in place! As we have been working with crocodiles (thick skin with bony osteoderms within them), and birds (covered in feathers) and neither were tame, skin and temporary injected electrodes were not options. Therefore we had to carry out surgery to directly implant wires into the muscles, and connect them to a backpack on the back of the animal that could not be damaged by the animals.
Now this might sound extreme, and invasive procedures are, but because of this all of our procedures passed through ethical approval from the universities, and the UK Home Office, with the goal of collecting the highest quality data, whilst maintaining animal welfare, and using the fewest animals. In all, the study covered work from DawnDinos with tinamou and crocodiles, as well as previous unpublished work on emu, quail, turkey, pheasant, and guinea fowl.
All of the animals were placed within enclosures (either a runway or a treadmill) and their backpacks were plugged into the computer for recording. We then measured muscle activity as the animals walked/ran, and distilled it into strides which comprise stance (toe-on to toe-off) and swing (toe-off to toe-on):
Figure designed for the paper that never made it. Showing the direction of travel and what we mean by toe-on and toe-off. |
Figure 2. from Cuff et al., 2019. Representative EMG signals from emus of three ages. |
1) We provide the first data for the palaeognathous birds (the group which include ostrich, emu, tinamou, kiwi, cassowary and some extinct birds like moas and elephant birds).
Whilst this may not sound particularly important, almost all of the published bird data to date comes from a small part of modern bird diversity, (mostly the group which include chickens, quail, guinea fowl) and as such it is vital to understand whether these few species are representative of birds and how much variation there is. From the overlapping datasets, it appears that birds are pretty consistent.
John's blog for a good article about it).
Figure 1B from Cuff et al., 2019. The TP is the labelled brown muscle, that wraps around the caudofemoralis longus (the blue one). |
3) We show how EMG signals change as emus grow. Well, they don't actually change that much, the overall signals are very similar, but as they get older, their signals get shorter suggesting that they've gained better control. This has been seen before in bird flapping, particularly for wing assisted incline running.
Modified Figure 8 from Cuff et al., 2019 showing the similarities between treadmill (0.1ms-1), and runways/overground for the pectoralis and TP muscles. |
5) All of the data from our study and previous published works was combined to give an evolutionary history of muscle activity.
That pretty much sums up the paper, there is obviously a lot more detail in there, and if you are interested and cannot access it from the link at top let me know and I can get you a copy.