Publication: In vivo and ex vivo range of motion in the fire salamander Salamandra salamandra
In vivo and ex vivo range of motion in the fire salamander Salamandra salamandra
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Herbst, E. C., Eberhard, E. A., Richards, C. T., & Hutchinson, J. R. (2022). In vivo and ex vivo range of motion in the fire salamander Salamandra salamandra. Journal of Anatomy, 241(4), 1066–1082. https://doi.org/10.1111/joa.13738
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Joint range of motion (RoM) analyses are fundamental to our understanding of how an animal moves throughout its ecosystem. Recent technological advances allow for more detailed quantification of this RoM (e.g. including interaction of degrees of freedom) both in ex vivo joints and in vivo experiments. Both types of data have been used to draw comparisons with fossils to reconstruct locomotion. Salamanders are often used as analogues for early tetrapod locomotion; testing such hypotheses requires an in-depth analysis of salamander join
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Herbst, E. C., Eberhard, E. A., Richards, C. T., & Hutchinson, J. R. (2022). In vivo and ex vivo range of motion in the fire salamander Salamandra salamandra. Journal of Anatomy, 241(4), 1066–1082. https://doi.org/10.1111/joa.13738