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Chiroptera

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Title: Chiroptera


1
Chiroptera Evolution of Flight
2
Vertebrate 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.

3
Questions 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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5
Some Weirdness.
  • Bats do a number of interesting morphological
    things.
  • Musculature differences.
  • Forearm specialization.
  • Modification of the shoulder.
  • Hind limb rotation.
  • Tricks w/ echolocation.

6
Another 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?

7
Basic 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.

8
Basic Bat Morphology Townsends big-eared bat.
9
Basic Bat Morphology Townsends big-eared bat.
10
Modes of Flight
  • Reptiles little flapping primarily gliding.
  • Aves (all w/ varying degrees of maneuverability)
  • rapid gliding
  • slow gliding
  • rapid flapping
  • slow flapping

11
Modes 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.

12
Mechanics 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.

13
Mechanics 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.

14
Mechanics of Flight.
15
Bat 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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17
Bat 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.

18
Bat 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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20
Bat 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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22
Some 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

23
Some 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

24
Echolocation
  • True echolocation occurs only in the
    microchiroptera.
  • Sound is produced in the larynx.
  • Sound is emitted through the nose or the open
    mouth.

25
Echolocation
  • 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.

26
Echolocation
  • 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.

27
Echolocation
  • 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.

28
Echolocation
  • 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).

29
Echolocation
  • 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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31
Echolocation
  • 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.

32
Echolocation
  • 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.

33
Echolocation
  • 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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37
Chiropteran Diversity
38
Bat 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).

39
Bat 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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41
Icaronycteris and Myotis. Note the scapula,
radius ulna, and calcar.
42
Bat 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?

43
Megachiroptera
  • 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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47
Teeth 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.

50
Flight 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.

53
Flight engine
  • Consider also what happens in the elbow.

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56
Microchiroptera
  • Rhinopomatidae
  • Mouse-tailed bats.
  • Considered most primitive because of presence of
    2 phalanges on second digit of manus, and unfused
    premax.

57
Emballonuridae
  • 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

58
Emballonuridae
  • Also known as the sheath-tailed bats.

59
Craseonycteridae
  • 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.

60
Nycteridae
  • 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.

61
Nycteridae
  • 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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64
Megadermatidae
  • 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.

65
Rhinolophidae
  • 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.

66
Rhinolophus note the horse shoe and the sella.
67
Rhinolophid Hipposideros sp. Note the large
nasal openings and indented rostrum.
68
Rhinolophids
  • Note the sepcialized sternum of the Rhinolophid
    compared to Myotis.

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70
Mormoopidae
  • 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.

71
Noctilionidae
  • 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.

72
Noctilio leporinus note the long rake-like feet.
Wingspan 50cm. They fish.
73
Phyllostomidae
  • 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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78
Phyllostomids
  • Other species make tents and are insectivorous.
    Some tent-making forms are polygynous.

79
Phylostomids
80
Compare the skulls of a fruit eating
Phylostomatid Artibeus, and a nectar feeder
Choeronycteris mexicana.
81
Mystacinidae
  • 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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83
Natalidae
  • 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.

84
Natalus lepidus
85
Natalus lepidus
86
Note the fused lumbar vertebras of Natalus
stramineus.
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88
Furipteridae
  • 2 genera and 2 species of smoky bats.
  • Costa Rica to Chile.
  • The thumb is very small and completely enclosed
    by the wing.

89
Thyropteridae
  • 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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91
Myzopodidae
  • 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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93
Vespretilionidae
  • 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.

94
Eptesicus fuscus
95
Lasiurus cinereas
96
Lasiurus cinereus note the shortened rostrum
characteristic of some insect feeding bats.
97
Myotis lucifugus
98
Myotis septentrionalis
99
X-ray photograph of Plecotus townsendii in flight.
100
Molossidae
  • 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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102
Compare the elbow of a verspertilionid and a
molossid.
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