Where Did Bats Come From? Ancestors and Descent Lines

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Discussion Overview

The discussion centers around the evolutionary origins of bats, exploring their descent lines and relationships with other mammals. Participants consider various hypotheses regarding the ancestors of bats, including gliding mammals and their connections to primates and rodents.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Debate/contested
  • Technical explanation

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants suggest that bats may have evolved from gliding mammals, such as flying squirrels.
  • Others propose that there are significant differences between gliding mammals and bats, questioning the existence of intermediaries in their evolutionary path.
  • A participant mentions a phylogenetic tree indicating that bats and primates share a common ancestor, but they belong to different groups.
  • Another participant notes that bats are more closely related to primates than to rodents, challenging initial assumptions about their lineage.
  • There is a discussion about the intelligence of bats in comparison to primates, raising questions about their cognitive abilities.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express differing views on the specific evolutionary pathways leading to bats, with no consensus on the exact lineage or the nature of their ancestors. The discussion remains unresolved regarding the details of their descent.

Contextual Notes

Some claims rely on interpretations of phylogenetic trees, which may not provide a complete picture of the evolutionary history. The discussion also highlights the complexity of bat ancestry, with various assumptions and conditions present in the arguments.

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I was just thinking about bats, and I have a question: Where did they come from?!

I can think of no animals that are even close to being related to the bat (except perhaps certain rodents (the bat is not a rodent, btw), like mice), and there are no other flying mammals, so they seem to be something of a unique case.

Anyway, I would appreciate it if someone could show the line (or, at least, possible lines) of descent toward bats.
 
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I'd imagine it'd be from gliding mammals. Like flying squirrells and whatnot.
 
I'd have to say squirrels too, at least it has to be a mammal of some kind, a gliding squirrel comes very close I guess..
 
Well, CSF and Monique, you're probably right (since the gliding squirrel has evolved the membranes for gliding, which could possibly have evolved into fully functional wings), but these are two very different species. Are there any intermediaries between the two (perhaps) that you can think of?
 
What are those evolutionary trees called to depict evolutionary routes? Philogenetic? If I spelled it correctly, then there is no information on Google about it in relation to bats :)
 
Here the phylogenetic tree

http://tolweb.org/tree?group=Eutheria&contgroup=Mammalia

Squirrels and mice are both related to each other with beaver and other rodent. Bat are actually on the same lineage as primates and bat have a common ancestor with "flying lemur" but they are not lemur and they glide.
 
Link indicates bats and primates share a common shrew-like ancestor, but belong to different groups.

http://www.batcon.org/discover/species/naturalhistory.html
 
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Originally posted by Robert Zaleski
Link indicates bats and primates share a common shrew-like ancestor, but belong to different groups.

http://www.batcon.org/discover/species/naturalhistory.html

Very interesting stuff, Robert. Thanks for the link.

So, the Chiroptera could be considered primates? Just how smart are they, when compared to (other) primates?
 
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Not primates, not even simians, but we both descend from those little insectivore beasties, back in the eocene, or was it the palaeocene? IIRC Linnaeus spotted the kinship back in his original book. Probably because our digits, in spite of obvious specialization, are still close to the primitive stage. Our thumbs and feet, and their wings, are really very small adaptations of five fingered paws.
 
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Interesting to see from iansmith's link that bats are more closely related to primates than to mice/squirrels/etc. as initially suspected. At least, that's the implication I get from that simplified diagram. Perhaps the actual ancestral history is a bit more complex.
 

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