How to Stick the Landing: Kangaroo Rats Use Their Tails to Reorient during Evasive Jumps Away from Predators

Author:

Schwaner M Janneke1,Freymiller Grace A23ORCID,Clark Rulon W2,McGowan Craig P14

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology, University of Idaho, 875 Perimeter Drive, Moscow, ID 83844, USA

2. Department of Biology, San Diego State University, 5500 Campanile Drive, San Diego, CA 92182, USA

3. Department of Evolution, Ecology, and Organismal Biology, University of California Riverside, 900 University Avenue, Riverside, CA 92521, USA

4. WWAMI Medical Education Program, 875 Perimeter Drive, Moscow, ID 83844, USA

Abstract

Synopsis Tails are widespread in the animal world and play important roles in locomotor tasks, such as propulsion, maneuvering, stability, and manipulation of objects. Kangaroo rats, bipedal hopping rodents, use their tail for balancing during hopping, but the role of their tail during the vertical evasive escape jumps they perform when attacked by predators is yet to be determined. Because we observed kangaroo rats swinging their tails around their bodies while airborne following escape jumps, we hypothesized that kangaroo rats use their tails to not only stabilize their bodies while airborne, but also to perform aerial re-orientations. We collected video data from free-ranging desert kangaroo rats (Dipodomys deserti) performing escape jumps in response to a simulated predator attack and analyzed the rotation of their bodies and tails in the yaw plane (about the vertical-axis). Kangaroo rat escape responses were highly variable. The magnitude of body re-orientation in yaw was independent of jump height, jump distance, and aerial time. Kangaroo rats exhibited a stepwise re-orientation while airborne, in which slower turning periods corresponded with the tail center of mass being aligned close to the vertical rotation axis of the body. To examine the effect of tail motion on body re-orientation during a jump, we compared average rate of change in angular momentum. Rate of change in tail angular momentum was nearly proportional to that of the body, indicating that the tail reorients the body in the yaw plane during aerial escape leaps by kangaroo rats. Although kangaroo rats make dynamic 3D movements during their escape leaps, our data suggest that kangaroo rats use their tails to control orientation in the yaw plane. Additionally, we show that kangaroo rats rarely use their tail length at full potential in yaw, suggesting the importance of tail movement through multiple planes simultaneously.

Funder

University of Idaho College of Science

American Society of Mammologists

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Plant Science,Animal Science and Zoology

Reference33 articles.

1. The mechanics of hopping by kangaroos (Macropodidae);Alexander;J Zool,1975

2. Locomotion in kangaroo rats and its adaptive significance;Bartholomew;J Mammal,1951

3. Kangaroo rat locomotion: design for elastic energy storage or acceleration?;Biewener;J Exp Biol,1988

4. Laboratory-reared rhesus monkeys can use their tails as tools;Erwin;Percept Motor Skills,1974

5. Recent interactions with snakes enhance escape performance of desert kangaroo rats (Rodentia: Heteromyidae) during simulated attacks;Freymiller;Biol J Linn Soc,2017

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