4.5 Article

Biomechanical and energetic determinants of the walk-trot transition in horses

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY
Volume 207, Issue 24, Pages 4215-4223

Publisher

COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jeb.01277

Keywords

equine; Froude number; gait; inverted pendulum; locomotion; oxygen consumption

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We studied nine adult horses spanning an eightfold range in body mass (M-b) (90-720 kg) and a twofold range in leg length (L) (0.7-1.4 m). We measured the horses' walk-trot transition speeds using step-wise speed increments as they locomoted on a motorized treadmill. We then measured their rates of oxygen consumption over a wide range of walking and trotting speeds. We interpreted the transition speed results using a simple inverted-pendulum model of walking in which gravity provides the centripetal force necessary to keep the leg in contact with the ground. By studying a large size range of horses, we were naturally able to vary the absolute walking speed that would produce the same ratio of centripetal to gravitational forces. This ratio, (M(b)v(2)/L)/(M(b)g), reduces to the dimensionless Froude number (v(2)/gL), where v is forward speed, L is leg length and g is gravitational acceleration. We found that the absolute walk-trot transition speed increased with size from 1.6 to 2.3 m s(-1), but it occurred at nearly the same Froude number (0.35). In addition, horses spontaneously switched between gaits in a narrow range of speeds that corresponded to the metabolically optimal transition speed. These results support the hypotheses that the walk-trot transition is triggered by inverted-pendulum dynamics and occurs at the speed that maximizes metabolic economy.

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