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Earlier we looked at basal bats and their closest outgroups. That entry from several years ago has proven to be a weekly and annual favorite among blog posts here at the pterosaur heresies.
Today we’ll do the same with newly arranged graphics (Figs. 1,2) principally matching the non-bat, Ptilocercus, to the basal bats, Onychonycteris and Icaronycteris (Fig. 1). I’m surprised I never did this before because the results are illuminating.
Figure 1. Ptilcercus (above) and Icaronycteris (below), sister taxa in the origin of bats. Click to enlarge. Despite the similarities of these two, the differences in dent ion and the size of the manus kept scholars from comparing these two taxa directly with one another. Ptilocercus is also close to the flying lemur, which is why its dentition is more like the flying lemur.
In figure 1 the similarities are striking:
Now let’s examine the differences. In the bat:
Figure 2. Selected details of Ptilocercus and Onychnycteris. The spreading of the metacarpals is a synapomrophy.
Remember
Ptilocercus has different teeth because it is more closely related to Cynocephalus, the flying lemur (Fig. 3), which is also not too distant from bats. Despite the appearance of extradermal membranes in dermopterans, it appears that those were obtained convergently in bats.
Figure 3. Cynocephalus, the flying lemur, shares many traits with Ptilocercus and basal bats. Note the distally reduced ulna.
Take another look at the bat family tree (Fig. 4).
Ptilocercus is not another tree shrew, like Tupaia. Ptilocercus is a miniature civet. Tupaia is in the lineage of rabbits. DNA evidence (Tsagkogeorga et al. 2013) supports this tree topology with bats arising from carnivores, like civets.
Figure 4. Bat evolution and origins from the Carnivora/Viverridae. They are sisters to the Pen-tailed tree shrew and colugos among living taxa. Protictis is an extinct outgroup taxon from the Paleocene.
The origin of flight
and flapping in bats continues to be a vexing problem. An earlier hypothesis based on current behavior remains unsatisfying.
Interesting YouTube video
on bat cooling in the tropics here. Yes they flap gently to generate a self-directed breeze, but they also lick themselves for evaporative cooling.
Interesting YouTube video on bat flight here.
More tomorrow.
References
Jepsen GL, MacPhee RDE 1966. Early Eocene bat from Wyoming. Science 154 (3754): 1333–1339. doi:10.1126/science.154.3754.1333. PMID 17770307.
Le Gros-Clark WE 1926. On the Anatomy of the Pen-tailed Tree-Shrew (Ptilocercus lowii.) Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London 96: 1179-1309.
DOI – 10.1111/j.1096-3642.1926.tb02241.x
Simmon NB, Seymour KL, Habersetzer J, Gunnell GF 2008. Primitive Early Eocene bat from Wyoming and the evolution of flight and echolocation. Nature 451 (7180): 818–21. doi:10.1038/nature06549. PMID 18270539.
Tsagkogeorga G, Parker J, Stupka E, Cotton JA, Rossiter SJ 2013. Phylogenomic analyses elucidate the evolutionary relationships of bats (Chiroptera). Current Biology 23 (22): 2262–2267.
wiki/Icaronycteris
wiki/Onychonycteris
wiki/Ptilocercus