|
|
|
|||
| Home Help Feedback Subscriptions Archive Search Table of Contents | ||||
First published online August 31, 2007
Journal of Experimental Biology 210, 3135-3146 (2007)
Published by The Company of Biologists 2007
doi: 10.1242/jeb.000273
Commentary |
Biomechanics of bird flight
Department of Biology, University of Portland, 5000 North Willamette Boulevard, Portland, OR 97203, USA
e-mail: tobalske{at}up.edu
Accepted 11 July 2007
| Summary |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Key words: wing, kinematic, muscle, work, power, wake, take-off, intermittent, maneuver, stability
| Introduction |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Power is measured at three different levels pertinent to flapping flight.
The first level is metabolic power input (Pmet) to the
muscles, directly of interest to a flying, foraging bird, and generally a
realm of study for respiratory, thermal and chemical physiologists.
Pmet is the rate the bird expends chemical energy to
supply the flight muscles, and it may be measured using double-labeled water
(Nudds and Bryant, 2000
;
Ward et al., 2004
;
Engel et al., 2006
), labeled
bicarbonate (Hambly et al.,
2002
), oxygen consumption and carbon dioxide production
(Ward et al., 2001
;
Ward et al., 2004
;
Bundle et al., 2007
).
Pmet equals the sum of mechanical power output from the
muscles (Pmus) and the rate of heat loss from the muscles.
Thus, Pmet may also be modeled using measures of heat
transfer (Ward et al.,
2004
).
At the next level, still inside the animal, Pmus acts
upon the skeleton and feathers. Except for thermal losses in connective
tissue, which are presently unknown:
![]() | (1) |
|
![]() | (2) |
To introduce the biomechanics of bird flight, I will first summarize
current understanding about the functional morphology of the avian wing with
implications for Pmus. Then, I will evaluate how
Paero varies with flight speed and explore some of the
wingbeat kinematics, flight modes and styles that covary with
Paero. Other variables besides work and power are of great
importance to the biology of flying birds, including the ability to maneuver
(Warrick et al., 2002
) as
well as be stable (Thomas and Taylor,
2001
; Taylor and Thomas,
2002
; Taylor and Thomas,
2003
). Compared with the amount of empirical data describing
steady hovering and forward flight, less is known about the biomechanics of
maneuvering and stability, and these subjects represent a new frontier of
study. Thus, I will include a synopsis of current data from maneuvering flight
before concluding with reflections on promising avenues for future
research.
| Primary flight muscles |
|---|
|
|
|---|
In contrast with the primary muscles of the limbs of terrestrial animals
that develop force nearly isometrically during walking and running, the
pectoralis in flying birds is designed to produce work and power
(Biewener and Roberts, 2000
)
(Fig. 1B). Sonomicrometry
reveals that the pectoralis undergoes proportionally large length change
(muscle strain), during contraction (20–40% of muscle resting length)
and exhibits a contractile velocity of 4–10 muscle lengths
s–1 among species
(Biewener et al., 1998
;
Tobalske and Dial, 2000
;
Askew and Marsh, 2001
;
Hedrick et al., 2003
;
Tobalske et al., 2005
).
Similar levels of muscle strain and strain rate are exhibited by the
supracoracoideus (Tobalske and Biewener, in press). It is important to note
that the pectoralis exhibits a bipinnate architecture with regional
heterogeneity in contractile behavior, which means that measurements of strain
taken at any one location must be evaluated with caution
(Soman et al., 2005
). Using
strain gauges, measurements of bone strain in the humerus adjacent to the
insertion of the muscles may be calibrated to measure whole-muscle force, but
there are concerns about high variance in calibrations
(Tobalske et al., 2003
) and
some species do not have a humerus shape that is amenable to measurements
(Tobalske and Dial, 2000
).
Birds may use a variety of methods to modulate Pmus.
Among flight speeds, cockatiels Nymphicus hollandicus primarily
modulate Pmus by varying the proportion of motor units
recruited in the pectoralis and, thereby, varying force
(Hedrick et al., 2003
).
Likewise, pigeons Columba livia vary motor-unit recruitment and
pectoralis force among flight modes (Dial,
1992a
; Dial and Biewener,
1993
). Other factors may permit modulation in
Pmus, including the shortening fraction, trajectory, and
timing of muscle activation and deactivation
(Askew and Marsh, 1997
;
Askew and Marsh, 2001
). It was
formerly hypothesized that small birds were constrained by their muscle
physiology to use a narrow range of contractile velocity in their pectoralis
(Rayner, 1985
), but
sonomicrometry and electromyography reveal that they use the same mechanisms
as larger birds, the timing and magnitude of neuromuscular activation as well
as the contractile velocity of the muscle, for modulating
Pmus (Tobalske et
al., 2005
; Tobalske and Biewener, in press;
Askew and Ellerby, 2007
). Many
birds also regularly use non-flapping phases (brief, extended-wing glides or
flexed-wing bounds) to modulate power during intermittent flight (see
`Intermittent flight', below).
| Variation in Paero with flight speed |
|---|
|
|
|---|
|
Consistent with the hypothesis that the pectoralis is the primary muscle
supplying the mechanical power output required for flight, measures of
Pmus in vivo
(Tobalske et al., 2003
)
(Fig. 2B) and in vitro
(Askew and Ellerby, 2007
) vary
as U-shaped curves in the same manner as Paero. The shape
of a Pmus curve is affected by the morphology and flight
style of a given species, and this means that there is inter-specific
variation in Vmp and Vmr. Some models
of Paero may be refined to take into account details of
wing shape, wing kinematics and intermittent flight behavior
(Rayner, 1979a
;
Rayner, 1979b
;
Ellington, 1984
;
Rayner, 1985
). Thus, efforts
to better understand both the biomechanics and ecology of flight will benefit
from revision of these models as additional empirical evidence emerges.
Small differences in efficiency (i.e.
Pmus/Pmet) have the potential to
dramatically affect the shape of the Pmet power curve
relative to that of Pmus and Paero
(Thomas and Hedenström,
1998
; Rayner,
1999
). Since Pmet is the rate of energy input
by a bird, the shape of the Pmet curve, rather than that
of Pmus or Paero, is what is
ultimately of importance in governing the Vmp and
Vmr of interest to a bird. For many years, it appeared
that the curve for Pmet was flat at intermediate flight
speeds, which suggested that efficiency is lowest in the range of preferred
flight speeds (reviewed in Ellington,
1991
). Recently, efforts to measure Pmet using
a variety of techniques including double-labelled water, heat transfer and gas
respirometry, reveal that the curve for Pmet is U-shaped
much as that for Pmus and Paero, with
muscular efficiency in the range of 20%
(Ward et al., 2001
;
Ward et al., 2004
;
Engel et al., 2006
;
Bundle et al., 2007
)
(Fig. 2C). Comparison of the
curves for Pmet and Pmus in cockatiels
Nymphicus hollandicus, measured in two different studies, suggests
that efficiency is not constant across speeds and that Vmp
and Vmr are both faster when measured using
Pmet compared with Pmus
(Tobalske et al., 2003
;
Bundle et al., 2007
)
(Fig. 2). To further clarify
this issue, it is vital to measure Pmet and
Pmus under similar experimental conditions due to
potential differences in Paero when a mask and
respirometery cabling is added to an animal
(Bundle et al., 2007
).
The major difference among models of Paero is the
method used to estimate Pind, although different
approaches are also employed to estimate Ppro and
Ppar. In a relatively simple model that is widely used by
ecologists, in part because it is available as a computer program
(Pennycuick, 1975
;
Pennycuick, 1989
),
Pind is estimated using a steady-state momentum-jet model.
This model treats the wings as fixed-length propellers rotating and
translating at a steady rate, as in a helicopter, even for the gliding flight
of birds. Propellers do not fully represent the complexity of the motions and
morphing ability of bird wings (Bilo,
1971
; Bilo, 1972
;
Warrick et al., 2005
;
Lentink et al., 2007
). In
contrast, alternative models (Rayner,
1979a
; Rayner,
1979b
; Ellington,
1984
) use vortex theory, which is capable of incorporating
unsteady motion and long-axis rotation of the wings (e.g.
Dickinson et al., 1999
).
When a wing produces lift, there is a net circulation of air about the wing
that represents a bound vortex on the wing
(Rayner, 1979a
;
Rayner, 1979b
;
Ellington, 1984
). The term
`bound' in this instance means attached or close to the wing, and is a
definition independent of the flexed-wing bound posture used in intermittent
flight. For real-world wings of finite span, the bound vortex is shed into the
wake as a `wake' vortex, and the circulation in the wake vortex is equal in
magnitude but opposite in sign to that of the bound vortex. Circulation varies
with translational and long-axis rotational velocity, angle of attack and
camber of the wing. Lift, in turn, is proportional to circulation as well as
wing span, translational velocity and air density. One simple way to think of
the relationship between wake vortices and lift is that, for a given need for
lift, as surface area surrounded by the wake vortices increases, the velocity
that the wings induce into the wake and the cost of producing lift,
Pind, both decrease.
During the 1980s there was an earnest attempt to test vortex theory for
flying birds using particle image velocimetry (PIV). Although the geometry of
the vortices shed into the wake during slow flight matched expectations, the
researchers were frustrated by measurements of momentum in the wake that were
insufficient to support the weight of the bird
(Spedding et al., 1984
). This
`momentum deficit paradox' was resolved using modern DPIV
(Spedding et al., 2003
), which
offers finer resolution of flow patterns in the wake. Significant new
observations about wake structure will undoubtedly improve models of
Pind.
For example, based on wake samples in the European kestrel Falco
tinnunculus engaged in moderate-speed forward flight
(Spedding, 1987
), it was
formerly thought that birds varied lift primarily using wing flexion, and not
by changing circulation in the bound vortex on their wings via
changes in wing velocity, camber or angle of attack
(Rayner, 1988
). Instantaneous
changes in circulation on the wings initiate the shedding into the wake of
`cross-stream' vortices that are parallel to long-axis of the wings. These
cross-stream vortices traverse the wake, they reveal a reduction in the
effective area for lift production that is swept by the wings, and this
reduction in effective area is predicted to increase the cost of producing
lift, Pind (Rayner,
1988
). Assuming a lack of significant cross-stream vortices, the
kinematics of faster flight in birds such as kestrels or pigeons (Columba
livia) emerge as an optimal pattern of wing motion
(Rayner, 1999
)
(Fig. 3A). Modern DPIV reveals
that cross-stream vortices are typical of forward flight
(Spedding et al., 2003
;
Hedenström et al., 2006
)
(Fig. 4), and this should serve
to revise models of Pind during fast flight.
|
|
Likewise, DPIV has recently revised our understanding of the mechanics of
hovering (Warrick et al.,
2005
). Hummingbirds are the only birds that can sustain hovering
in still air, and formerly it was thought that they supported their weight
during hovering using symmetrical down and upstrokes with equal
Pind during each half of the wingbeat. This assumption
lead to a proportionally lower estimate for Pind compared
with all other bird species, in which it appears that only the downstroke
helps to support weight during hovering and slow flight
(Rayner, 1979a
). DPIV instead
reveals that approximately 75% of the weight support during a wingbeat is
provided by downstroke, and 25% is provided by upstroke, in hovering rufous
hummingbirds Selasphorus rufus
(Warrick et al., 2005
).
Reasonable measurements of Ppro are largely lacking for
birds engaged in flapping flight, and this highlights a clear need for new
research. Models presently either assume that profile drag is constant during
intermediate flight speeds (Pennycuick,
1975
; Pennycuick,
1989
) or apply a coefficient of drag for the wing that is obtained
from fixed-wing measurements and modeled according to blade-element theory,
which treats the wing as set of fixed-width strips each moving at their own
velocity, due to the flight velocity of the bird as well as the angular
velocity of the wing (Rayner,
1979b
). Unfortunately, drag on fixed wings
(Withers, 1981
;
Lentink et al., 2007
) or
during gliding in live birds (Pennycuick
et al., 1992
) is probably quite different from unsteady drag
forces operating on the flapping wings during slow flight
(Spedding, 1993
;
Dickinson, 1996
). Promising
methods for more accurate models of Ppro during flapping
include measuring force using transducers at the base of mounted, revolving
wings (Usherwood and Ellington,
2002
) or robotic flapping wings
(Sane and Dickinson, 2001
),
perhaps coupled with computational fluid dynamics
(Wang et al., 2004
).
Caution is always merited when interpreting the measurements from revolving
wings because propeller motion does not fully emulate the complex motion of
the bird wing. Bearing this in mind, it may be that drag is higher during
rotational motion of the wings compared with gliding. Maximal drag
coefficients for the wings of galliform birds (Phasianidae) during rotation
(Usherwood and Ellington,
2002
) are approximately double the value measured for translating
wings (Drovetski, 1996
).
To date, dynamically scaled robotic models have only been developed for
insects (Willmott et al.,
1997
; Sane and Dickinson,
2001
), and these models have wings designed as flat plates that do
not morph like bird wings (Bilo,
1971
; Bilo, 1972
;
Warrick et al., 2005
).
Ideally, efforts to physically model Ppro will incorporate
detailed 3D kinematics of the wing (Askew
et al., 2001
; Hedrick et al.,
2002
; Tobalske et al.,
2007
) to program robotic motion and use materials for the robotic
wing that morph in a realistic manner.
As for Ppro, estimates of Ppar are
subject to considerable uncertainty because drag coefficients obtained from
isolated bird bodies vary over 400%, from
0.1 in varnished, footless,
starling carcasses (Maybury,
2000
) to
0.4 in frozen waterfowl
(Pennycuick et al., 1988
). One
might expect values from live birds to be lower than frozen carcasses, but a
parasite drag coefficient of
0.37 was measured from dive rates in
passerines during migration
(Hedenström and Liechti,
2001
). Coefficients from 0.24–0.34 may be representative of
live starlings in flight, and drag coefficients decrease as a function of
forward flight speed (Maybury,
2000
). There is some debate over the manner in which body area
scales with body mass among species, and frontal projected area is necessary
for a computation of coefficient of drag
(Norberg, 1990
).
Hedenström and Rosén suggest that the frontal area of the body
scales differently in passerines and non-passerines
(Hedenström and Rosén,
2003
), whereas Nudds and Rayner argue that scaling is similar
between the two groups, and that reported differences in other studies are
caused by comparing live birds with frozen specimens
(Nudds and Rayner, 2006
).
To further understanding of the aerodynamics of the bird body, it will be
useful to take a broader view of the body to include the tail
(Thomas, 1993
). Treating the
body as a `parasite' upon the wings is a leftover from early aerodynamics
research and is misleading, because the body is capable of producing lift even
with the wings completely folded, as during intermittent bounds, which are
flexed-wing pauses in between flapping phases
(Csicsáky, 1977
;
Tobalske et al., 1999
). The
tail functions to reduce parasite drag
(Maybury and Rayner, 2001
); it
contributes to the production of lift both when the wings are not present on a
carcass (Maybury, 2000
;
Maybury et al., 2001
) as well
as during flight in live birds (Usherwood
et al., 2005
). Incorporating body lift (and, by extension, tail
lift) into a model of Paero reduces the estimated power
required for relatively fast flight in flap–bounding birds
(Rayner, 1985
;
Tobalske et al., 1999
).
A model that is useful for describing the aerodynamics of the tail
considers the tail as delta wing (Thomas,
1993
). This model indicates that the tail morphology that produces
the optimum lift-to-drag ratio is slightly forked when folded and triangular
in shape when fanned, and that the area of the tail in front of the maximum
span contributes to lift and drag, whereas the area behind the maximum span
contributes only to drag. These properties of the tail serve as a foundation
for testing, with vigorously debated conclusions, whether the evolution of
ornamentation, such as an elongated tail or streamers on a forked tail,
represent a handicap that resulted from sexual selection or an aerodynamic
benefit for activities such as maneuvering
(Thomas, 1993
;
Møller et al., 1995
;
Park et al., 2000
;
Evans, 2004
). Aspects of the
model do not appear to be well supported by the use of the tail during flight
in barn swallows Hirundo rustica
(Evans et al., 2002
), so new
efforts are needed to modify the delta-wing model or develop alternative
models.
Kinematics and upstroke aerodynamics
Unlike some forms of terrestrial locomotion in which gait selection may be
identified using discrete changes in duty factor (the proportion of time a
limb is in contact with the substrate, producing force) and patterns of
sequential limb motion (Alexander,
1989
), wing kinematics and associated aerodynamics, vary in a
continuous manner with flight speed in birds.
Although downstroke kinematics are relatively invariant, upstroke
kinematics differ among species and according to flight speed
(Brown, 1963
;
Scholey, 1983
;
Tobalske, 2000
;
Park et al., 2001
;
Hedrick et al., 2002
). Birds
with wings that are relatively pointed, or of high-aspect ratio (long and
thin), transition among flight speeds using tip-reversal upstrokes at slow
speeds, feathered upstrokes at intermediate speeds, and swept-wing upstrokes
at fast flight speeds (Fig.
3B). Birds that have rounded distal wings or wings of low aspect
ratio (short and broad) tend to flex their wings regardless of flight speed.
Some exceptions to this pattern exist. For example, galliform birds with
rounded wings use a tip-reversal upstroke during take-off
(Brown, 1963
;
Tobalske and Dial, 2000
), and
birds with rounded wings such as the black-billed magpie Pica
hudsonica will alter upstroke postures according to acceleration and
deceleration (Tobalske and Dial,
1996
). Regardless of wing shape, the span ratio (mid-upstroke span
divided by mid-downstroke span) generally decreases as a function of flight
speed in birds, although it may increase with increasing speed in some
passerines (Tobalske and Dial,
1996
; Tobalske et al.,
1999
; Rosén et al.,
2004
; Tobalske et al.,
2007
).
Formerly, it was thought that there were two wingbeat gaits in birds
because early PIV experiments revealed one of two patterns. One vortex ring
was shed per downstroke during slow flight
(Spedding et al., 1984
), and
the upstroke appeared aerodynamically inactive. This was identified as a
`vortex-ring' gait (Rayner,
1988
; Rayner,
1999
). During faster flight
(Spedding, 1987
), tip-vortices
were shed into the wake during the entire wingbeat, indicating a
`continuous-vortex' gait (Rayner,
1988
; Rayner,
1999
). Because the wake area for a continuous-vortex wake would be
greater than for a vortex ring, Pind was predicted to be
lower for the continous-vortex gait.
Several problems are, nevertheless, apparent with a simple two-gait scheme
for classifying avian flight (Tobalske,
2000
), and new data reveal that continuous, rather than discrete,
variation is characteristic of wing kinematics and aerodynamics
(Spedding et al., 2003
;
Rosén et al., 2004
;
Tobalske et al., 2007
).
Although a two-gait system is intuitively acceptable to humans, given our use
of walking and running, a two-gait system does not advance our understanding
of obvious differences in wing kinematics during the presumptive vortex-ring
gait of slow flight (Tobalske,
2000
) (Fig. 3). All
measured wing kinematics, as well as patterns of muscle activity, change in a
gradual way across flight speeds (Tobalske
and Dial, 1996
; Tobalske,
2000
; Park et al.,
2001
; Tobalske et al.,
2007
). Furthermore, DPIV measurements of wake vortices across a
range of speeds (Spedding et al.,
2003
; Hedenström et al.,
2006
) reveal that upstrokes are aerodynamically active during slow
flight and that upstroke function varies gradually rather than categorically
(Fig. 4).
Thus, the use of modern DPIV has highlighted a need for new comparative
study of the aerodynamics of bird flight. For the limited number of species
studied to date using DPIV, there does not appear to be significant variation
in wake geometry during forward flight
(Spedding et al., 2003
;
Hedenström et al., 2006
).
Also, the magnitude of normalized circulation (a dimensionless form, equal to
circulation divided by wing chord and flight velocity) in the wake is similar
among species (Hedenström et al.,
2006
). This may indicate that wing chord and flight speed are
adequate predictors of circulation upon the wing, which would be highly useful
for modeling efforts (Hedrick et al.,
2002
), since lift is proportional to circulation. More
pessimistically, it may indicate that current DPIV measurements of
time-averaged wake structures lack sufficient temporal resolution to reveal
important details of wing aerodynamics
(Dabiri, 2005
).
Instead of a gait-based system of classification, a fascinating alternative
that may serve to unify comparisons of kinematics and aerodynamics among birds
is that they seek to maintain their Strouhal number (frequency times
amplitude, divided by forward flight speed) during cruising flight in an
effort to optimize the frequency of vortex shedding
(Taylor et al., 2003
). A
diverse array of birds, as well as flying insects and swimming fish, exhibit
Strouhal numbers in the range of 0.2–0.4 during cruising locomotion.
Coordinated kinematic and DPIV studies will help test how these kinematics
compare with rates of vortex shedding.
Maximum effort in slow flight
One way to elicit maximal performance from a bird is to get it to fly under
conditions characteristic of the left side of the U-shaped power curve for
flight (Fig. 2). Efforts to
measure maximal performance may involve load-lifting
(Marden, 1994
;
Chai and Millard, 1997
;
Altshuler et al., 2004
),
hovering in air of reduced density (Chai
and Dudley, 1995
; Altshuler et
al., 2004
), allowing the animal to escape to a refuge or freedom
(DeJong, 1983
;
Warrick, 1998
;
Tobalske and Dial, 2000
;
Earls, 2000
;
Askew et al., 2001
), or
fostering competitive interaction
(Tobalske et al., 2004
).
Birds are already moving with significant velocity when their feet leave
the ground at the end of take-off, and the majority of their initial flight
velocity is due to hindlimb thrust (Earls,
2000
; Tobalske et al.,
2004
). Initial flight velocity increases with body size among
birds (Tobalske et al., 2004
)
from 0.8 m s–1 in the rufous hummingbird (weighing 3 g) to 6
m s–1 in wild turkey (Meleagris gallopavo; 6 kg).
Since they are already moving, Paero required immediately
after take-off is lower than it would be from a standing start at 0 m
s–1 (Fig. 2).
This may represent a significant saving in power for birds that regularly
take-off and land, so it would be worthwhile if measurements could be made in
the same species for power during leg thrust
(Henry et al., 2005
) and
Pmus of the wings during take-off
(Dial and Biewener, 1993
).
It is widely recognized that mass-specific whole-body power (W
kg–1; the
(Ep+Ek)/t term in
Eqn 2, divided by body mass),
declines as body size increases among bird species
(Pennycuick, 1975
;
DeJong, 1983
;
Ellington, 1991
;
Warrick, 1998
;
Tobalske and Dial, 2000
).
However, the mechanical explanations for this trend are not fully understood.
Since whole-body power is directly relevant to escape from predation
(Kullberg et al., 1998
;
Hedenström and Rosén,
2001
), new research is needed to better understand what factors
limit performance. A potential explanation is that available mass-specific
power from the flight muscles declines as a function of increasing body mass
(Pennycuick, 1975
;
Ellington, 1991
). If muscle
stress and strain are invariant with body mass, then mass-specific work is
invariant as well, and mass-specific power should scale with wingbeat
frequency, approximately with mass to the –1/3 power
(Hill, 1950
;
Pennycuick, 1975
;
Ellington, 1991
).
As expected from this line of reasoning, mass-specific whole-body power
scales with wingbeat frequency in galliforms during escape flight
(Tobalske and Dial, 2000
).
However, when wing kinematics are input to an aerodynamic model
(Askew et al., 2001
), it is
estimated that mass-specific Pmus actually increases,
rather than decreases, with body mass. The estimated positive scaling of
Pmus may be due to an increase in pectoralis strain
(proportional to body mass raised to the 0.26 power)
(Tobalske and Dial, 2000
) or
pectoralis stress (proportional to body mass raised to the 0.33 power)
(Askew et al., 2001
). Ideally
these alternatives should be tested using in vivo strain-gauge
recording, but the humerus of galliform birds is not suited for such
measurements (Tobalske and Dial,
2000
). Other groups of species, such as doves [Columbidae
(Dial and Biewener, 1993
;
Soman et al., 2005
)] may prove
useful for such a test. Lacking in vivo force data, the conclusion
(Askew et al., 2001
) that
muscle strain scales positively with body mass during escape flight relies on
the accuracy of models used for Paero. As outlined above
(see `U-shaped power curve'), a variety of new methods including DPIV
(Spedding et al., 2003
;
Warrick et al., 2005
) and
pressure-transducer measurements
(Usherwood et al., 2003
;
Usherwood et al., 2005
) show
promise for helping to revise estimates of the cost of producing lift.
Additional evidence also indicates that flight performance in take-off or
ascending flight should not necessarily be limited by a negative scaling of
muscle-mass-specific power. In a broad comparison of take-off in insects and
some birds, all of which had their legs immobilized, proportional load-lifting
ability is reported to increase with increasing body mass
(Marden, 1994
). Also, larger
hummingbirds exhibit greater ability to climb with added load or support their
weight in reduced-density air compared with smaller hummingbirds
(Chai and Millard, 1997
;
Altshuler et al., 2004
). For
hummingbirds, the positive scaling of flight performance is accounted for by
departures from geometric and dynamic similarity among species. Larger
hummingbirds have proportionally larger wings and use greater wingbeat
amplitudes (Chai and Millard,
1997
; Altshuler et al.,
2004
); both attributes should reduce proportional
Pind costs.
|
There are profound effects of body size upon the use of intermittent
flight. Species that use both flap–gliding and flap–bounding
either have a body mass less than 300 g or have pointed wings of relatively
high aspect ratio (Tobalske,
1996
; Tobalske,
2001
; Bruderer et al.,
2001
). Species larger than 300 g, for example pigeons, use
intermittent glides but do not exhibit bounds. The scaling in passerines
(Passeriformes) and woodpeckers (Piciformes) reveals that the percentage of
time spent flapping increases with body mass
(Tobalske, 1996
;
Tobalske, 2001
). These
patterns may be explained by an adverse scaling of sustainable mass-specific
power in the flight muscles as body size increases, but this hypothesis must
be tested exactly as outlined above (see `Maximum effort in slow flight')
Although they can glide, small birds, less than 30 g, with rounded,
low-aspect ratio wings, appear to almost exclusively use bounds during
intermittent flight (Tobalske et al.,
1999
; Tobalske et al.,
2005
; Askew and Ellerby,
2007
). This behavior is puzzling in light of the estimated higher
Paero for flap–bounding during slow flight compared
with continuous flapping (Rayner,
1985
; Rayner et al.,
2001
). Testing the underlying variables responsible for this
behavior should prove challenging but, nevertheless, worthwhile, as
flap–bounding is extremely common in the most diverse birds, the
passerines.
An important hypothesis is that intermittent bounds are the sole mechanism
available to small birds to enable them to modulate power output
(Rayner, 1985
), but the zebra
finch Taeniopygia guttata (13 g) appears to be able to modulate
contractile behavior in its muscles in the same manner as larger birds
(Tobalske et al., 2005
;
Askew and Ellerby, 2007
). An
argument that such modulation may nevertheless be inefficient requires
measurement of Pmet during continuous flight and
flap–bounding. Likewise, any argument about the functional significance
of flap–bounding would be strengthened if Paero was
measured empirically rather than estimated from modeling and if
Pmus could be measured in vivo. Unfortunately,
the added weight and drag associated with masks and tubing used in gas
respirometry causes small birds to stop using intermittent pauses
(Bundle et al., 2007
), and
their bones are too small to permit strain-gauge recordings. For investigating
the energetics of flap–bounding, it is feasible to use techniques other
than gas respirometry for measuring metabolic rate including double-labelled
water (Nudds and Bryant, 2000
;
Ward et al., 2001
;
Engel et al., 2006
) or labeled
bicarbonate (Hambly et al.,
2002
). Efficiency was estimated at 11% using labeled bicarbonate
during slow flight in zebra finch Taeniopygia guttata
(Hambly et al., 2002
), and
this is intriguing because this estimate is lower than a
20% estimate for
efficiency during fast flight in starlings that was obtained using
double-labelled water (Ward et al.,
2001
). It may be possible to measure thermal efficiency of
contractions in isolated muscle preparations
(Barclay, 1996
).
Another hypothesis is that, regardless of efficiency, variation in
flap–bounding flight patterns could be constrained by neural control of
limb motion. This control could be in the form of a central pattern generator
such as has already been reported for the flapping motion and respiration of
birds (Funk et al., 1992
).
Aspects of flap–bounding do not appear consistent with this hypothesis,
however, as the duration of bounds and the number of wingbeats between bounds
vary significantly with flight speed
(Tobalske et al., 1999
).
| Maneuvering and stability |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Flapping motions may affect both maneuvering and stability. Downstroke is
predicted to be a stabilizing influence about the longitudinal axis, whereas a
lift-producing upstroke may be used to lower stability and thereby enhance
maneuverability (Taylor and Thomas,
2002
). Depending upon their posture, the wings alone may provide
longitudinal stability during gliding
(Taylor and Thomas, 2002
;
Thomas and Taylor, 2001
).
Lift and drag from the tail may also enhance stability, and the
contribution of the tail is affected by morphology and posture
(Hummel, 1992
;
Thomas and Taylor, 2001
). For
example, greater drag associated with a long tail contributes to longitudinal
stability (Hummel, 1992
),
whereas pitching the tail with the trailing edge down will decrease stability
(Thomas and Taylor, 2001
).
Kinematics from aerial insectivores indicates that the tail is used to vary
total lift in concert with the wings rather than as an independent mechanism
for controlling body pitch (Warrick,
1998
), and this hypothesis merits new comparative study.
Because the intrinsic three-dimensionality of maneuvering presents special
challenges for study, relatively few data are available at present, and a
general pattern does not yet emerge for describing the mechanics with which
birds accomplish maneuvers. One pattern that is shared by pigeons and two
species of parrots (Psittaciformes) during slow flight is that the birds
initiate rolls during downstroke (Warrick
and Dial, 1998
; Hedrick and
Biewener, 2007a
; Hedrick and
Biewener, 2007b
). Pigeons effect their turns using subtle,
bilateral force asymmetries in their pectoralis that are maintained throughout
a turn (Warrick et al.,
1998
). Electromyographic patterns suggest that asymmetries in
pectoralis force are also used in cockatiels during turns, but the side that
exhibits greater activation switches midway through a turn
(Hedrick and Biewener, 2007a
).
In contrast with these two species, in rose-breasted cockatoos Eolophus
roseicapillus, electromyography indicates that bilateral asymmetries of
force in distal wing muscles are more important for turning than minor
asymmetries in the pectoralis (Hedrick and
Biewener, 2007a
; Hedrick and
Biewener, 2007b
).
|
One conclusion that is clear from this recent work is that flapping
dynamics must be incorporated into existing models of maneuvering
(Taylor and Thomas, 2002
;
Warrick et al., 2002
). Given
a lack of kinematics, early attempts to model the comparative maneuvering
ability of birds have treated these activities as fixed-wing events
(Norberg, 1990
). Moreover,
even fixed-wing maneuvering predictions may need revision, given the recent
observation that the distal portions of the wings of common swifts Apus
apus may exhibit leading-edge vorticity when in a glide posture
(Videler et al., 2004
).
Leading-edge vorticity on physical models of swift wings is of sufficient
magnitude to increase lift, hence torque for maneuvering, above that predicted
using blade-element wing theory. It has been hypothesized that the magnitude
of this lift may help explain tight-turning maneuvers during high-speed
gliding in swifts (Videler et al.,
2004
), but experiments with wings of varying posture indicates
that it is drag reduction, rather than enhanced lift, that is the primary
benefit derived from the swept-wing posture during high-speed glides
(Lentink et al., 2007
).
There are empirical measures of stability during flight in tethered insects
(Taylor and Thomas, 2003
), but
no data are yet available from flying birds. Results from desert locusts
Schistocerca gregaria indicate that they can correct for
perturbations within one wingbeat. It is hypothesized that a key element to
this ability to quickly react to disturbance is the tuning of their
neuromuscular control to an observed pitching oscillation that occurs near the
rate of the wingbeat. In the case of the locust, the pitching oscillation is
at one half the rate of the wingbeat frequency. If the neuromuscular control
of stability is tuned at this frequency of oscillation, the timing of
neuromuscular control should scale among similarly shaped insects proportional
to square root of the length of the insect
(Taylor and Thomas, 2003
). The
tuning of the neural system for control in birds is predicted to be less
constrained by a need to approximate the timing of the wingbeat because the
tail of birds can also control stability
(Taylor and Thomas, 2003
).
| Reflections on future research |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Secondly, it is imperative that biomechanical studies be integrated in an
ecological, evolutionary context. A recent example of how this may be
accomplished is a comparative study of flight performance in hummingbirds
(Altshuler et al., 2004
) that
helps explain morphology, flight performance and ecological distribution in a
broad array of species. Scanning the literature, there is a general trend for
biomechanical studies to explore mechanisms in one representative species
without explicit tests of how these mechanisms relate to the behavior and
ecology of species in nature. A reductionist approach to designing experiments
is a necessary first step, of course, but if it becomes a defining
characteristic, it will lead to a plethora of studies that spin only in their
own small domain and fail to demonstrate how flight mechanics fit into the
larger reality of the biology of birds. Studying closely related species may
help to reveal patterns that would be otherwise be obscured in a two-species
approach (Tobalske, 1996
), and
a phylogenetic approach to experimental design is always mandatory for
supporting an argument of adaptive significance for a trait
(Garland and Adolph,
1994
).
List of symbols
| Acknowledgments |
|---|
| References |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Alexander, R. McN. (1989). Optimization and
gaits in the locomotion of vertebrates. Physiol. Rev.
69,1199
-1227.
Altshuler, D. L., Dudley, R. and McGuire, J. A.
(2004). Resolution of a paradox: hummingbird flight at high
elevation does not come without a cost. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci.
USA 101,17731
-17736.
Askew, G. N. and Ellerby, D. J. (2007). The mechanical power requirements of avian flight. Biol. Lett. 3,445 -448.[CrossRef][Medline]
Askew, G. N. and Marsh, R. L. (1997). The effects of length trajectory on the mechanical power output of mouse skeletal muscles. J. Exp. Biol. 200,3119 -3131.[Abstract]
Askew, G. N. and Marsh, R. L. (2001). The
mechanical power output of the pectoralis muscle of blue-breasted quail
(Coturnix chinensis): in vivo length cycle and its
implications for muscle performance. J. Exp. Biol.
204,3587
-3600.
Askew, G. N., Marsh, R. L. and Ellington, C. P.
(2001). The mechanical power output of the flight muscles of
blue-breasted quail (Coturnix chinensis) during take-off.
J. Exp. Biol. 204,3601
-3619.