Oldest-known bat skeletons shed light on evolution of flying mammals
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[April 14, 2023]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The two oldest-known fossil skeletons of bats,
unearthed in southwestern Wyoming and dating to at least 52 million
years ago, are providing insight into the early evolution of these
flying mammals - today represented by more than 1,400 species.
The fossils, described in a new study, are of a previously unknown
species called Icaronycteris gunnelli that is closely related to two
other species known from slightly younger fossils from the same area,
which during the Eocene epoch was a humid and subtropical ecosystem
centered on a freshwater lake.
"This bat was not much different than the insectivorous bats flying
around today," said paleontologist Tim Rietbergen of the Naturalis
Biodiversity Center in the Netherlands, lead author of the study
published this week in the journal PLOS ONE.
"If it folded its wings next to its body, it would easily fit inside
your hand. Its wings were relatively short and broad, reflecting a more
fluttering-flight style. Dentition (its teeth) clearly show that this
was an insect-eating bat. It was also most likely an echolocating bat,"
Rietbergen added. Echolocation is a form of sonar common in bats, used
to navigate and hunt.
Its teeth possessed sharp cusps and crests for slicing through the
exoskeleton of insects and lacked the rounded crushing surfaces useful
for eating fruit.
What is remarkable about these two fossils - one discovered in 2017 and
the other originally dug up in 1994 and only now recognized as a new
species - is how they show that bats early in their history already
possessed many traits seen in modern species.
"Bats have looked pretty much like bats since they first show up as
complete skeletons in the fossil record. We don't have anything that we
could say looks 'half bat' - or, in other words, we lack any good
transitional fossils," Arizona State University paleontologist and study
co-author Matt Jones said.
"Icaronycteris gunnelli is a bit different from modern bats - it has
longer legs and its arm bones are a little bit different in length. The
most notable thing is that it still preserved a claw on its index
finger. A few other fossil species from around this time still have that
claw, but it's been lost in most living bats," Jones added.
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An Eocene skeleton from Wyoming of the
newly identified bat species Icaronycteris gunnelli is seen in this
undated handout photograph obtained by Reuters on April 13, 2023.
The specimen is in the research collections of the American Museum
of Natural History in New York. Mick Ellison/American Museum of
Natural History/Handout via REUTERS
This species was closely related to two other bat species whose
fossils were previously found at the same locale - Icaronycteris
index and Onychonycteris finneyi. This indicates there was a greater
diversity of species early in the history of bats than previously
appreciated.
The fossils represent the oldest-known bat skeletons - both very
complete and well-preserved. The only older bat fossils are isolated
teeth and jaw fragments from places including Portugal and China,
dating to about 55 to 56 million years ago.
"The early evolutionary history of bats is unclear and we don't have
answers to many questions," Rietbergen said.
The fact that these oldest-known skeleton specimens are clearly
fully-formed bats suggests that the first bats arose millions of
years earlier.
"They probably evolved during the Paleocene epoch, the
10-million-year interval between the end of the Mesozoic era and the
Eocene epoch," Jones said, describing a time of incredible
evolutionary experimentation as mammals became the dominant land
animals in the aftermath of the asteroid impact that doomed the
dinosaurs 66 million years ago.
Just two other vertebrate groups have achieved powered flight - the
flying reptiles called pterosaurs and birds, both appearing way
before bats. The asteroid knocked out the pterosaurs.
Scientists are still trying to determine which mammals were
ancestral to bats.
"We think bats probably evolved from a small, tree-dwelling,
insectivorous mammal," Jones said. "But there are a number of
enigmatic fossil insectivores from around the time bats would have
evolved and it's unclear which, if any, are related to bats."
(Reporting by Will Dunham, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
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