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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 83 No. 1 January 2000, pp. 156-165
Copyright ©2000 by the American Physiological Society
Department of Biology and Program in Movement Science, Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri 63130
Earhart, Gammon M. and
Paul S. G. Stein.
Scratch-Swim Hybrids in the Spinal Turtle: Blending of Rostral
Scratch and Forward Swim. J. Neurophysiol. 83: 156-165, 2000. Turtles with a complete transection
of the spinal cord just posterior to the forelimb enlargement at the
D2-D3 segmental border produced coordinated rhythmic hindlimb
movements. Ipsilateral stimulation of cutaneous afferents in the
midbody shell bridge evoked a rostral scratch. Electrical stimulation
of the contralateral dorsolateral funiculus (DLF) at the anterior cut
face of the D3 segment activated a forward swim. Simultaneous
stimulation of the ipsilateral shell bridge and the contralateral DLF
elicited a scratch-swim hybrid: a behavior that blended features of
both rostral scratch and forward swim into each cycle of rhythmic
movement. This is the first demonstration of a scratch-locomotion
hybrid in a spinal vertebrate. The rostral scratch and the forward swim shared some characteristics: alternating hip flexion and extension, similar timing of knee extensor activity within the hip cycle, and a
behavioral event during which force was exerted against a substrate.
During each cycle, each behavior exhibited three sequential stages,
preevent, event, and postevent. The rostral scratch event was a rub of
the foot against the stimulated shell site. The forward swim event was
a powerstroke, a hip extension movement with the foot held in a
vertical position with toes and webbing spread. The two behaviors
differed with respect to several features: amount of hip flexion and
extension, electromyogram (EMG) amplitudes, and EMG duty cycles.
Scratch-swim hybrids displayed two events, the scratch rub and the swim
powerstroke, within each cycle. Hybrid hip flexion excursion, knee
extensor EMGs, and hip flexor EMGs were similar to those of the
scratch; hybrid hip extension excursion and hip extensor EMGs were
similar to those of the swim. The hybrid also had three sequential
stages during each cycle: 1) a combined scratch prerub
and swim postpowerstroke, 2) a scratch rub that also
served as a swim prepowerstroke, and 3) a swim
powerstroke that also served as a scratch postrub. Merging of the
rostral scratch with the forward swim was possible because of
similarities between the sequential stages of the two forms, making
them biomechanically compatible for hybrid formation.
Kinematic and myographic similarities between the rostral scratch and
the forward swim support the hypothesis that the two behaviors share
common neural circuitry. The common features of the sequential stages
of each behavior and the production of scratch-swim hybrids provide
additional support for the hypothesis of a shared core of spinal cord
neurons common to both rostral scratch and forward swim.
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