Moa, footprint pressures, ungulates, deer, goat, tahr, trampling damage, <I>Euryapteryx</I>, <I>Pachyornis</I>, <I>Dinornis</I>, <I>Dromaius novaehollandiae</I>, <I>Cervus elephas</I>, <I>Capra hircus</I>, <I>Hemitragus jemlahicus</I>

Footprint Pressures and Locomotion of Moas and Ungulates and Their Effects on the New Zealand Indigenous Biota through Trampling

Foot area and structure, body weight and locomotion are compared in moas and ungulates to give estimates of pressure and edge loading when standing and moving. Moa foot pressures ranged from 0.15 kg/cm2 to 0.19 kg/cm2 which is very similar to those of emu feet. Red deer foot pressures were 0.395 kg/cm2, goat 0.430 kg/cm2, and tahr 0.35 kg/cm2. The differences in edge loadings were not so marked. During locomotion over soft ground, the ungulate hoof acts like a chisel, and as the toes splay out, the hoof edge shears the substratum.