“…Animals can also use abrupt changes in direction, or manoeuvrability gambits, to outmanoeuvre faster predators (Brown & Taylor, 1995; Howland, 1974; Humphries & Driver, 1970; Wilson et al., 2018). Although speed, acceleration and agility are all important for escaping predators, performing at maximal capacity across all traits is impossible due to biomechanical constraints; the faster an animal runs, the greater its inertia and the harder it is to rapidly change direction and remain stable (Wheatley et al., 2018; Wynn et al., 2015). Thus, animals must trade sprint speed for agility—the faster an animal runs, the lower its agility (Howland, 1974; Wilson et al., 2018).…”