TY - JOUR
T1 - Musculoskeletal modelling under an evolutionary perspective
T2 - deciphering the role of single muscle regions in closely related insects
AU - David, Sina
AU - Funken, Johannes
AU - Potthast, Wolfgang
AU - Blanke, Alexander
N1 - © 2016 The Author(s)
PY - 2016/10/1
Y1 - 2016/10/1
N2 - Insects show a remarkable diversity of muscle configurations, yet the factors leading to this functional diversity are poorly understood. Here, we use musculoskeletal modelling to understand the spatio-temporal activity of an insect muscle in several dragonfly species and to reveal potential mechanical factors leading to a particular muscle configuration. Bite characteristics potentially show systematic signal, but absolute bite force is not correlated with size. Muscle configuration and inverse dynamics show that the wider relative area of muscle attachment and the higher activity of subapical muscle groups are responsible for this high bite force. This wider attachment area is, however, not an evolutionary trend within dragonflies. Our inverse dynamic data, furthermore, show that maximum bite forces most probably do not reflect maximal muscle force production capability in all studied species. The thin head capsule and the attachment areas of muscles most probably limit the maximum force output of the mandibular muscles.
AB - Insects show a remarkable diversity of muscle configurations, yet the factors leading to this functional diversity are poorly understood. Here, we use musculoskeletal modelling to understand the spatio-temporal activity of an insect muscle in several dragonfly species and to reveal potential mechanical factors leading to a particular muscle configuration. Bite characteristics potentially show systematic signal, but absolute bite force is not correlated with size. Muscle configuration and inverse dynamics show that the wider relative area of muscle attachment and the higher activity of subapical muscle groups are responsible for this high bite force. This wider attachment area is, however, not an evolutionary trend within dragonflies. Our inverse dynamic data, furthermore, show that maximum bite forces most probably do not reflect maximal muscle force production capability in all studied species. The thin head capsule and the attachment areas of muscles most probably limit the maximum force output of the mandibular muscles.
U2 - 10.1098/rsif.2016.0675
DO - 10.1098/rsif.2016.0675
M3 - Journal articles
C2 - 27707910
SN - 1742-5662
VL - 13
JO - Journal of the Royal Society, Interface
JF - Journal of the Royal Society, Interface
IS - 123
ER -