VAMPIROS CORREDORES
Un interesante estudio llevado adelante en la Cornell University devela que los
vampiros Desmodus rotundus poseen un tipo de locomoción en tierra semejante a
otros cuadrúpedos terrestres. Si bien es conocido por todos que los vampiros
pueden caminar en cuatro patas con mayor eficiencia que cualquier otro tipo de
murciélago, el estudio realizado comprobó que además pueden correr con notable
habilidad.
La experiencia consistió en colocar vampiros en una cinta para correr. Para
sorpresa de los investigadores, los vampiros a determinada velocidad comenzaban
a correr, describiendo el hecho como si fuesen caballos que en un corto lapso de
tiempo pasan de caminar a galopar.
La velocidad registrada alcanzó los 4 km por hora.
Otro hecho inusual que describen es el modo en que se impulsan al correr.
Mientras la mayoría de los animales usan los miembros posteriores , la energía
que sostiene el acto de correr en los vampiros es producida por sus brazos, por
lo que recuerda a un pequeño gorila en carrera...
Los autores sugieren que este tipo de locomoción puede haber surgido para evitar
ser pisados por los animales de los que se alimentan o para seguir presas más
atléticas, por ejemplo agutíes, de las que se podrían haber alimentado previo a
la introducción del ganado en América.
El trabajo ha sido publicado como una breve comunicación en la revista Nature,
17 de Marzo de 2005, siendo sus autores Daniel Riskin, estudiante graduado en
Zoología y John W. Hermanson, Profesor Asociado de Ciencias Biomédicas.
En internet puede leerse una comunicación (en inglés) en http://www.news.cornell.edu/stories/March05/Riskin.bats.snd.html
Además en este sitio se puede acceder a un video (es necesario tener el programa
QuickTime) que muestra las extraordinarias habilidades como corredores de los
vampiros.
VER VIDEO. ARCHIVO DE MEDIO MEGA
FUENTE DE ESTE ARTÍCULO: http://www.news.cornell.edu/ Consultada la web en el año 2005. El video es propiedad de los autores de la web.
The common vampire bat, Desmodus rotundus uses its powerful forelimbs to propel itself when running. Copyright © Cornell University Click on the image for a high-resolution version (868 x 600 pixels, 557K)


Unlike other bats, vampire bats keep out of trouble by running, Cornell
researchers find
The common vampire bat, Desmodus rotundus uses its powerful forelimbs to propel
itself when running. Copyright © Cornell University Click on the image for a
high-resolution version (868 x 600 pixels, 557K)
ITHACA, N.Y. -- Although most people think of bats as stealthy mammals that flit
about in the night sky, at least one species has evolved a terrestrial trot
never before seen in bats, according to a recent Cornell University study.
It's known that the common vampire bats of Central and South America behave much
more like four-legged terrestrial mammals, in that they like to walk around on
the ground; other bat species fumble helplessly when left to walk. But
researchers in Cornell's College of Veterinary Medicine have discovered that
these bats not only walk but run. The unprecedented gait of Desmodus rotundus is
described in a brief communication in this week's issue of Nature magazine (March
17, 2005) from Daniel Riskin, Cornell graduate student in zoology, and his
adviser John W. Hermanson, associate professor of biomedical sciences.
What seemed like a crazy idea -- challenging these bats on an increasingly
speedy treadmill -- revealed a novel ability which the researchers believe
evolved independently to facilitate feeding behavior. "What we observed was like
a horse going from a walk to a gallop over a very short amount of time," Riskin
explains. The researchers kept increasing the speed of the treadmill and, much
to their surprise, their subjects broke into a run.
Frames from a video show how the bat propels itself when running. Click on the image for a longer sequence of frames (827 x 499 pixels, 282K), or click here for a Quicktime movie (572K)
"They just seem to do everything a little differently from the general bat rule,"
Riskin says about what he refers to as the "cute, adorable, big-eyed and family-oriented"
vampire bats.
Not only are vampire bats unusual because they run, but also in the way that
they power their gait. "Unlike most animals which use their hind legs as a
source of power, these exceptional creatures power their run with their
forelimbs," Hermanson explains. Getting most of the push from their long
forelimbs -- actually their wings and therefore very strong -- the bats run more
like a small gorilla than a comparable four-legged creature like a mouse. They
run up to about 2.5 miles per hour. Although many of the 1,100 species of bats
are known to walk, the common
vampire is the only one so far to pass Riskin and Hermanson's treadmill test and
break into a running gait.With the introduction of large herds of livestock into
their native environments of Central and South America, these bats don't need to
hurry to catch the cattle from which they extract perhaps a tablespoon of blood
at a time for sustenance. They feed while their prey are sleeping, spending
perhaps 10 minutes drinking from the small cuts they make. However, running may
help them avoid being stepped on, Riskin suggests. More likely, the researchers
say, the ability to run evolved long ago, when vampire bats had to prey on
faster South American athletes such as the agouti, a rodent about the size of a
hare, which might wake up and take a swipe at the nocturnal visitor. It remains
unclear exactly what the native prey were before the introduction of cattle, he
adds.
The Cornell zoologists plan to go a step further and compare the vampire bat to
another species of bat endemic to New Zealand. Riskin explains, "The vampire bat
is good on the ground because when you feed on the hoof of an animal that weighs
14,000 times more than you do, it's dangerous." Also, there are and always have
been a variety of predators in the Western Hemisphere environment. In contrast,
Riskin says, the bats and birds of New Zealand had no predators to keep them
flying. Many of the birds became flightless walkers, and the bats walk more than
others, as flight is energetically very expensive.
"Vampire bats in Latin America are good on the ground because it's a very
dangerous place, and bats in New Zealand are good on the ground because it's a
very safe place," Riskin says. While New Zealand bats definitely don't run --
they failed the treadmill test -- Riskin wants to compare the walking gaits of
the two species.
Cornell undergraduate Gerald Carter contributed to the study.
This release was prepared by Cornell News Service science-writing intern Sarah
Davidson.