The present study investigated the undulation motion performed by finswimmers at the surface, aiming to uncover the influence of gender, practice level, and race distance on selected kinematic parameters. The undulation frequency and the swimming speed decreased with the increasing race distance from 100 m to 800 m for both expertise levels. This suggests an adaptive decrement in the energy expenditure for long races. Moreover, although novices were slower than experts on 800 m, they showed a higher frequency. Novices seem thus to rush their action, privileging muscular strength and quick motion in a attempt to swim faster. This point to a lack of efficiency in the novices’ stroke technique. While stroke frequency decreased with increasing race distance, mean joint amplitude increased, irrespective of the expertise level. This also suggests that both novices and experts can adapt their energy output. Regarding motion amplitude, the experts’ upper limbs appeared to act as a stabilizing device. Expert finswimmers limit potential energy due to upper limbs oscillation in order to increase kinetic energy. In contrast, novices’ larger upper limbs amplitude and lower speed indicate that potential energy is not transformed in to kinetic energy as efficiently. Such an inefficacy is reinforced by the fact that their shoulder operated as a pivot point, so that the body behaved as a pendulum rather than as an element along which a wave was transmitted, and by the fact that their frontal area was wider due to their larger upper limbs amplitude. In addition, the novices’ shoulder was nearer to the snorkel, as they were privileging breathing and were not as used to submerge their head as elite finswimmers. They did not take advantage of buoyancy to balance their upper limbs. Note that underwater, the undulatory motion starts from the hip down to the ankle (Baly et al., 2002), whereas at the surface this motion basically starts from the shoulder for novices. Regarding gender, females were slower than males, and their stroke frequency was lower. Females’ upper limbs oscillation was larger, while that of the lower limbs was smaller. In spite of such a large lower limbs oscillation and an important knee bending, males were faster than females. They appear to take most advantage of the maximal acceleration generated at the moment of down-kick than female (Tamura et al., 2002). The experts’ vertical amplitude at the ankle was larger than for novices irrespective of the race distance. Likewise, thanks to the stabilizing role of the upper limbs and the resulting streamlining, the energy gained and stored was used to increase the ankle vertical amplitude. Therefore the speed reached by male finswimmers might be due to the potential energy generated by the wrist amplitude, which is transformed in kinetic energy and transmitted caudally, in the line of the suggestion made by Sanders et al. (1995). That amplitude increased from hip to ankle in elite finswimmers, particularly on 800 m, suggests a whip-like action (Ungerechts, 1982). Both the reduction of frequency and the rising of ankle amplitude induced a relief in the foot pain resulting from the friction and the rigidity of the monofin. Nevertheless, standard monofin with specific length and rigidity allowed to reach an amplitude and a frequency most adept to the race. As suggested by Videler and Kamermans (1985) for dolphins, elite finswimmers seem to beneficiate from a large propellant area and to accelerate during downstroke, which they optimized by setting both a gliding and a propellant phase. Interlimb dissociation allowed elite finswimmers to reach and to preserve their high speed and to achieve the best performance. Expert male finswimmers exhibited a smaller knee bending than females of the same expertise and than male novices, inducing a limitation in frontal drag. Indeed, at the surface, the body has better be always profiled. In comparison to underwater results reported by Baly et al. (2002), the experts’ upper limbs were used as a stabilizing device at the surface too. For novices however, an efficient oscillation starts at the shoulder level at the surface, whereas it starts at the hip level underwater. Stroke frequency at surface is higher than underwater for the same race distance, whereas the ankle amplitude is bigger. For both surface and underwater swimming, hip and knee amplitude of oscillation is almost similar. Interestingly, our out-water camera did not record any marker. This suggests that even in surface swimming, finswimmers tended to operate in a quasi-underwater situation, probably because underwater swimming is faster than doing so at the surface. The ankle amplitude was larger underwater than at the surface, despite the lower hip angular excursion. Such results may be understood by the larger mass of water efficiently used underwater. |