Christofer Clemente
Lecturer
Science and Environmental Science
University of Sunshine Coast
Australia
Biography
Dr Clemente is interested in the relationship between form, function and ecology of living and extinct animals. His earliest studies examined the relationship between vision and ecology in spiders. Later, at the University of Western Australia, Dr Clemente switched his focus to the evolution of locomotion. He studied morphology, metabolic rates and biomechanics and compared these to ecological characteristics and locomotory ability in a large group of lizards, the varanids. Dr Clemente similarly studied these traits in other lizard groups, including an extensive project examining the evolution of bipedalism in dragon lizards, showing lizards were essentially popping a wheelie. He later continued his research at the University of Cambridge, focusing on insect adhesion, examining the multitude of solutions insects have developed to overcome the problems of sticking to smooth surfaces. At Harvard University, Dr Clemente examined the vertebrate muscle system, specifically how muscle mechanics integrate with the environment dynamically, during locomotion. His research at the University of Queensland continued my research into lizard locomotion, with a focus on the design of biologically inspired climbing robots. He has combined many aspects of this research into his current role at the University of the Sunshine Coast and is particularly interested in the emerging field of Evolutionary Biomechanics.
Research Interest
Ecophysiology, ecomorphology, biomechanics, evolutionary systems.
Publications
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Clemente CJ, Wilson RS. Balancing biomechanical constraints: Optimal escape speeds when there is a trade-off between speed and maneuverability. Integrative and comparative biology. 2015 Sep 2;55(6):1142-54.
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Dick TJ, Clemente CJ. Where Have All the Giants Gone? How Animals Deal with the Problem of Size. PLoS biology. 2017 Jan 11;15(1):e2000473.
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Clemente CJ, Cooper CE, Withers PC, Freakley C, Singh S, Terrill P. The private life of echidnas: using accelerometery and GPS to examine field biomechanics and assess the ecological impact of a widespread, semi-fossorial monotreme. InINTEGRATIVE AND COMPARATIVE BIOLOGY 2017 Mar 1 (Vol. 57, pp. E227-E227). JOURNALS DEPT, 2001 EVANS RD, CARY, NC 27513 USA: OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC.