Inertial Tail Effects during Righting of Squirrels in Unexpected Falls: From Behavior to Robotics.

Journal: Integrative and comparative biology
PMID:

Abstract

Arboreal mammals navigate a highly three dimensional and discontinuous habitat. Among arboreal mammals, squirrels demonstrate impressive agility. In a recent "viral" YouTube video, unsuspecting squirrels were mechanically catapulted off of a track, inducing an initially uncontrolled rotation of the body. Interestingly, they skillfully stabilized themselves using tail motion, which ultimately allowed the squirrels to land successfully. Here we analyze the mechanism by which the squirrels recover from large body angular rates. We analyzed from the video that squirrels first use their tail to help stabilizing their head to visually fix a landing site. Then the tail starts to rotate to help stabilizing the body, preparing themselves for landing. To analyze further the mechanism of this tail use during mid-air, we built a multibody squirrel model and showed the righting strategy based on body inertia moment changes and active angular momentum transfer between axes. To validate the hypothesized strategy, we made a squirrel-like robot and demonstrated a fall-stabilizing experiment. Our results demonstrate that a squirrel's long tail, despite comprising just 3% of body mass, can inertially stabilize a rapidly rotating body. This research contributes to better understanding the importance of long tails for righting mechanisms in animals living in complex environments such as trees.

Authors

  • Toshihiko Fukushima
    Locomotion in Biorobotic and Somatic Systems Group, Max Planck Institute for Intelligent Systems, Heisenbergstraße 3, Stuttgart 70569, Germany.
  • Robert Siddall
    Locomotion in Biorobotic and Somatic Systems Group, Max Planck Institute for Intelligent Systems, Heisenbergstraße 3, Stuttgart 70569, Germany.
  • Fabian Schwab
    Locomotion in Biorobotic and Somatic Systems Group, Max Planck Institute for Intelligent Systems, Heisenbergstraße 3, Stuttgart 70569, Germany.
  • Séverine L D Toussaint
    Institute of Biology, Humboldt University of Berlin, Philippstrasse 13, Haus 2, 10115 Berlin, Germany.
  • Greg Byrnes
    Department of Biology, Siena College, 515 Loudon Road, Loudonville, NY 12211, USA.
  • John A Nyakatura
    Institute of Biology, Humboldt University of Berlin, Philippstrasse 13, Haus 2, 10115 Berlin, Germany.
  • Ardian Jusufi
    1 Centre for Autonomous Systems, Faculty of Engineering and Information Technology, University of Technology, Sydney.