poster
Relationship between Head Shape and Impact Mitigation in Plunge Diving Behavior of Boobies
Boobies have the habit of plunging into the sea at high speeds over 90 km/h to capture fish. Their head shape has changed over the history of evolution and this change may have benefitted boobies by the mitigation of impact on the plunge into the water. In this study, we focused on this possibility and investigated a head shape suitable for water plunging from the viewpoint of shock mitigation as well as the evolutional meanings of head shape change. In this research, booby’s head were modeled on the computer based on the CT scanned data of the scull of current and ancestral boobies and the models were printed by 3D printer to be used for the water plunging experiments. The fossil head of the ancestor was deformed during the fossilization process, so it was restored using modeling software. The completed model was plunged into the water surface at a speed of approximately 5.8 m/s, and the impact force was compared by measuring the acceleration at the time of water surface plunge. As a result, it was confirmed that the model based on the head of the present species had a smaller shock per unit volume and had an impact mitigation effect.