Title: Chiroptera
1Chiroptera Evolution of Flight
2Vertebrate Flight
- True flight is found in 3 vertebrate groups.
- Reptiles (Pterosaurs etc)
- Aves
- Mammalia
- Many vertebrate glider groups, including mammals,
frogs, geckos, lizards, snakes, and fish.
3Questions to Ponder
- What selective pressures led to the evolution of
flight in bats? - How did bats take to the air?
- Top down hypothesis
- Bottom up hypothesis
- Where there intermediate forms?
- Why are bats nocturnal birds diurnal?
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5Some Weirdness.
- Bats do a number of interesting morphological
things. - Musculature differences.
- Forearm specialization.
- Modification of the shoulder.
- Hind limb rotation.
- Tricks w/ echolocation.
6Another Question
- Why is there but 1 group of bats (maybe 2), but 4
marsupial glider groups, 3-4 rodent glider
groups, 1 dermopteran group, 1 amphibian glider
group, and numerous reptilian glider groups?
7Basic Physical Requirements of Vertebrate Flight
- Need for a lifting surface
- each group evolved wings.
- Means of propulsion
- again, wings provide thrust.
- Control of stability
- wt. Concentrated near center of mass for
metabolic efficiency - decreased wt. of appendages
- increased appendage manageability
- Physiological and CNS changes.
8Basic Bat Morphology Townsends big-eared bat.
9Basic Bat Morphology Townsends big-eared bat.
10Modes of Flight
- Reptiles little flapping primarily gliding.
- Aves (all w/ varying degrees of maneuverability)
- rapid gliding
- slow gliding
- rapid flapping
- slow flapping
11Modes of Flight
- Bats
- low speed w/ extreme maneuverability.
- NOTE bats forage and eat on the wing, whereas
flycatches land to eat. Also, bats echolocate
whereas birds require log-distance vision.
Bats use short-distance hearing.
12Mechanics of Flight
- Based on Bernoulli principle
- Air moving over top of wing moves faster than air
on bottom. - This creates negative pressure on top of wing.
- Leading edge is raised above Plane of Motion.
- Air is directed against ventral surface of wing.
- ? angle of attack.
13Mechanics of Flight.
- Camber is anteroposterior curvature.
- The greater the camber angle of attack, the
more lift is produced - If camber angle of attack is too great,
turbulence results and you reach a stalling
point. - Drag is opposite to direction of movement.
- Depends on speed, surface area, and shape.
- Drag increases in proportion to wing surface
area, as square of speed, with angle of attack
and camber.
14Mechanics of Flight.
15Bat Wings.
- High camber
- High lift at low speeds.
- Excessive drag at high speeds.
- Camber angle of attack
- Held constant during wing beat cycle.
- Controlled by propatagium and plagiopatagium.
- Humerus and radius occipito-pollicalis control
leading edge.
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17Bat Wings.
- Camber angle of attack cont.
- Trailing edge controlled by hind foot and tensor
plagiopatagii. - Camber vie humerus and digit 5.
- Can be modified for extreme lift at low speed.
- Thrust
- Thrust during cycle because of give of trailing
edge of chiropatium while leading edge is rigid.
18Bat Wings.
- Aspect ratio.
- Length / width or
- (wing span)2 / wing area.
- Low aspect ratio wings are good for low speed and
maneuverability. - High aspect ratio wings are good for rapid flight
and endurance.
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20Bat Wings.
- Wing loading (wt / wing area).
- Reduced wing loading results in greater ability
to fly at low speed. - High wing loading is associated with ability to
achieve high speed.
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22Some Examples
- Family / species Food WL AR
- Phylostomatidae
- Macrotus waterhousii Insects / fruit .112 6.8
- Artibous jamaicansis Fruit .219 5.6
- Choeronycteris mexicana Nectar 6.9
- Vespertilionidae
- Myotis yumanensis Insects .084 6.7
- M. evotis Insects .077 6.5
- M.lucifugus Insects .099 6.5
- Plecotus townsendii Insects .090 6.0
23Some Examples
- Family / species Food WL AR
- Molosidae
- Tadaridae brasiliensis Insects .165 8.6
- T. molosa Insects .159 9.7
- Eumops parotis Insects .266 10.0
- Brown Creeper .112 4.6
- Yellow Warbler .137 4.9
- Brown Headed Cowbird .283 5.7
- Chimney Swift .215 8.6
- Cliff Swallow .181 7.5
24Echolocation
- True echolocation occurs only in the
microchiroptera. - Sound is produced in the larynx.
- Sound is emitted through the nose or the open
mouth.
25Echolocation
- Sound quality.
- Some bats produce high intensity pulses.
- Used primarily by insectivores and piscivores.
- Molossids
- Noctilionids
- Vespertilionids
- Some HIP bats emit the pulses through the nose.
- Rhinolophids.
26Echolocation
- Some bats produce Low Intensity Pulses.
- These bats are called whispering bats. They feed
primarily on fruits, nectar, and some small
vertebrates. - Why use high frequency sounds?
- High frequency sounds attenuate rapidly in air.
- Higher frequencies are associated with shorter
wavelengths.
27Echolocation
- Why use high frequency sounds?
- Shorter wavelengths are more efficient at
detecting small insect sized prey. - High frequency sound may be distrinct from
background noise.
28Echolocation
- Sound Force.
- A dyne is defined as the force required to
accelerate a 1g mass to 1 cm/s/s. - Humans have a lower force threshold of about
.0002 dynes. - Bats are capable of producing sound with forces
ranging from 1 dyne to 200 dynes (equivalent to a
top fuel dragster).
29Echolocation
- Morphological specialization
- Tensor tympani and stapedius are extremely well
developed. Also, these muscles receive action
potentials shortly after (3 milliseconds) sound
action potentials are produced. - Changes in neural pathways.
- Ability to beam sound through nose leafs and
lips.
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31Echolocation
- Tragus and antitragus used to detect sounds.
- Bones housing the inner ear and middle ear are
insulated from the rest of the skull by fat and
blood filled sinuses.
32Echolocation
- Echolocation signals.
- FM signals
- These signals have a short duration, but sweep a
broad frequency range. - FM signals are ideally suited to determining
size, shape, surface qualities, and range of a
target.
33Echolocation
- CF signals
- CF signals are constant frequency (or nearly so)
but have a significant time duration. - CF signals are good for detecting presence, and
through dopler shift, whether prey is approaching
or departing.
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37Chiropteran Diversity
38Bat Diversity
- Earliest bat fossils are from the early Eocene of
North America - Icaronycteris index
- There are no intermediate forms - earliest bats
are good bats. - Underived characters include 38 teeth (compared
to 44 for underived eutherian number).
39Bat Diversity
- Icaronycteris was capable of flight and
echolocation, but lacked a keeled sternum. - Icaronyceris had only partial fusion of the
radius and ulna, and dorsal position of the
scapula. - Earliest megachiroptera are from the early
Oligocene of Europe and Africa - Archaeopteropus and Propotto.
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41Icaronycteris and Myotis. Note the scapula,
radius ulna, and calcar.
42Bat Diversity
- As is often the case in biology, there has been a
rather ugly controversy concerning the
evolutionary history of the megachiroptera and
microchiroptera. Are they diphyletic or
monophyletic?
43Megachiroptera
- Pteropodidae
- 36 genera and 154 species of tropical and
subtropical Old World fruit and nectar feeding
bats. Predominantly nocturnal, with body sizes
ranging from 15g to 1.6Kg. - They do not echolocate like micro-chiroptera,
they are specialized for feeding on fruit and
nectar (note teeth and palates they do not
consume pulp), and they have odd eye structures.
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47Teeth Diet
- Contrast the teeth of an insectivorous
vespertilionid (A B), a nectivorous
phyllostomatid (C D), and a frugivorous
phyllostomatid (E F).
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49- Pteropus, Myotis, and Molossus.
- Anterior and posterios views of the proximal end
of humerus. - Note the extensive change inposition of the head.
50Flight engine
- Think about the forces involved in the wing-beat
cycle, and why the humeri of megachiroptera and
microchiroptera might differ. - Molossid shoulder is shown on next slide.
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52- Compare also the flight engine of birds and bats.
53Flight engine
- Consider also what happens in the elbow.
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56Microchiroptera
- Rhinopomatidae
- Mouse-tailed bats.
- Considered most primitive because of presence of
2 phalanges on second digit of manus, and unfused
premax.
57Emballonuridae
- 13 genera and 47 species of sac-winged bats
distributed worldwide. - They are insectivorous w/ dilambdodont teeth
(30-34).
- Sacs are ventral within the propatagium of males
(less so in females), and are probably used for
production of pheromones
58Emballonuridae
- Also known as the sheath-tailed bats.
59Craseonycteridae
- Known only from Thailand. The family is
monotypic. Craseonycteris thonglongyai weighs
only 1.5 - 2.0g. - Also known as the bumblebee bat.
- They have no external tail or calcar.
60Nycteridae
- 1 genus and 12 species of slit-faced bats in
sub-Saharan Africa, Madagascar, Sumatra, Borneo,
and Malaysia, Java, Bali, and Kangean. - Have a groove through the face, which together
with the nose leaf, functions in propagation of
low intensity echolocation calls.
61Nycteridae
- Uropatagium encloses tail, and end of tail is
shaped like a T. - Mose are insectivorous, but some feed on
vertebrates, including other bats.
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64Megadermatidae
- False-vampire bats of Australia, Africa, india,
the East Indies, and southeast Asia. - They have large ears which are united across the
forehead, a divided tragus, nose leaf, and
absence of upper incisors. - Some have wingspans up to 1m.
- Some feed on lizards, others on arthropods and
insects.
65Rhinolophidae
- Horseshoe bats Karl Koopman says there are 10
genera and 130 species. - They include the old world leaf-nosed bats.
- There may be 2 subfamilies Rhinolophinae and
Hipposiderinae. - Hipposiderinae lack the sella, and have fewer
teeth. - Hibernating forms have delayed fertilization.
66Rhinolophus note the horse shoe and the sella.
67Rhinolophid Hipposideros sp. Note the large
nasal openings and indented rostrum.
68Rhinolophids
- Note the sepcialized sternum of the Rhinolophid
compared to Myotis.
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70Mormoopidae
- This is the group established by James Dale
Shitty Smitty Smith. - They are New World, all have a tail and a tragus
with a secondary fold of skin. - They lack a nose-leaf and have small eyes.
71Noctilionidae
- These are the buldog or fishing bats. There is
but 1 genus and 2 species. - Larger species feeds on fish, the smaller species
feeds on insects.
72Noctilio leporinus note the long rake-like feet.
Wingspan 50cm. They fish.
73Phyllostomidae
- 49 genera and 141 species of new-World leaf nosed
bats. - Some species (including frugivores and
sanguinivores) lack the nose leaf. - 3 species of vampires - feed either on cattle or
birds. - Vampires exhibit food sharing this is reciprical
altruism. - Consider the physiological implication of feeding
on blood.
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78Phyllostomids
- Other species make tents and are insectivorous.
Some tent-making forms are polygynous.
79Phylostomids
80Compare the skulls of a fruit eating
Phylostomatid Artibeus, and a nectar feeder
Choeronycteris mexicana.
81Mystacinidae
- These are the short-tailed bats from New Zealand,
one of which is extinct since the 60s. - They are good on the ground, and like vampires,
can take off from the ground. - Note the talon.
- They can furl the patagia, and are capable of
burrowing.
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83Natalidae
- 1 genus and 5 species of funnel-eared bats from
Mexico to the South America and the Caribean. - Domed fore-head and no nose leaf.
- Males have a natalid organ (glandular sensory
cells) below skin on forehead.
84Natalus lepidus
85Natalus lepidus
86Note the fused lumbar vertebras of Natalus
stramineus.
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88Furipteridae
- 2 genera and 2 species of smoky bats.
- Costa Rica to Chile.
- The thumb is very small and completely enclosed
by the wing.
89Thyropteridae
- Only 2 species of disc-winged bats.
- Distributed from Mexico to Brazil
- Thumb discs are attached by a pedicle, and appear
to aid the animals while clinging to fronds of
banana leaves etc. - Thyroptera tricolor on next slide.
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91Myzopodidae
- Old-world sucker-footed bat. Monotypic family
contains only Myzopoda aurita. - Only bat species endemic to Madagascar.
- Disc does not have a pedicle, and represents an
independent origin of the structure.
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93Vespretilionidae
- Evening bats most diverse family of bats, and
with the exception of murid rodents, the most
diverse mammalian family. - Worldwide distribution.
- Predominantly insectivorous.
- Hibernate in the winter, but arouse to drink.
94Eptesicus fuscus
95Lasiurus cinereas
96Lasiurus cinereus note the shortened rostrum
characteristic of some insect feeding bats.
97Myotis lucifugus
98Myotis septentrionalis
99X-ray photograph of Plecotus townsendii in flight.
100Molossidae
- 12 genera and 80 species of free-tailed bats.
- Found in both the old and new worlds.
- Molossids do not hibernate - Tadarida
brasiliensis migrates and does go into torpor. - Military attempted to use bat-bombs during WWII.
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102Compare the elbow of a verspertilionid and a
molossid.
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