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A 50-million-year-old, three-dimensionally preserved bat skull supports an early origin for modern echolocation

Hand, Suzanne J.; Maugoust, Jacob; Beck, Robin M.D.; Orliac, Maeva J.

A 50-million-year-old, three-dimensionally preserved bat skull supports an early origin for modern echolocation Thumbnail


Authors

Suzanne J. Hand

Jacob Maugoust

Maeva J. Orliac



Abstract

Bats are among the most recognizable, numerous, and widespread of all mammals. But much of their fossil record is missing, and bat origins remain poorly understood, as do the relationships of early to modern bats. Here, we describe a new early Eocene bat that helps bridge the gap between archaic stem bats and the hyperdiverse modern bat radiation of more than 1,460 living species. Recovered from ∼50 million-year-old cave sediments in the Quercy Phosphorites of southwestern France, Vielasia sigei’s remains include a near-complete, three-dimensionally preserved skull—the oldest uncrushed bat cranium yet found. Phylogenetic analyses of a 2,665 craniodental character matrix, with and without 36.8 kb of DNA sequence data, place Vielasia outside modern bats, with total evidence tip-dating placing it sister to the crown clade. Vielasia retains the archaic dentition and skeletal features typical of early Eocene bats, but its inner ear shows specializations found in modern echolocating bats. These features, which include a petrosal only loosely attached to the basicranium, an expanded cochlea representing ∼25% basicranial width, and a long basilar membrane, collectively suggest that the kind of laryngeal echolocation used by most modern bats predates the crown radiation. At least 23 individuals of V. sigei are preserved together in a limestone cave deposit, indicating that cave roosting behavior had evolved in bats by the end of the early Eocene; this period saw the beginning of significant global climate cooling that may have been an evolutionary driver for bats to first congregate in caves.

Citation

Hand, S. J., Maugoust, J., Beck, R. M., & Orliac, M. J. (2023). A 50-million-year-old, three-dimensionally preserved bat skull supports an early origin for modern echolocation. Current Biology, 33(21), 4624-4640. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2023.09.043

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Sep 18, 2023
Online Publication Date Oct 18, 2023
Publication Date 2023-11
Deposit Date Dec 4, 2023
Publicly Available Date Dec 4, 2023
Journal Current Biology
Print ISSN 0960-9822
Publisher Elsevier
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 33
Issue 21
Pages 4624-4640
DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2023.09.043
Keywords General Agricultural and Biological Sciences; General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

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