Icaronycteris

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Icaronycteris
Temporal range: Early Eocene
Icaronycteris index.jpg
Icaronycteris index, Green River Formation, in the ROM,
Scientific classification
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Species

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Icaronycteris is an extinct genus of microchiropteran (echolocating) bat that lived in the early Eocene, approximately 52.2 million years ago, making it the earliest known definitive bat.[1] Four exceptionally preserved specimens, among the best preserved bat fossils, are known from the Green River Formation of North America.[1] There is only one thoroughly described species of bat in the genus, I. index,[2] although fragmentary material from France has also been tentatively placed within Icaronycteris as the second species I. menui.[3] I. sigei is based on well-preserved fragments of dentaries and lower teeth found in Western India.[4]

File:Icaronycteris index (1).jpg
Icaronycteris index, Houston

Description

Icaronycteris[5] measured about 14 centimetres (5.5 in) long and had a wingspan of 37 centimetres (15 in). It closely resembled modern bats, but had some primitive traits. The tail was much longer and not connected to the hind legs with a skin membrane, the first wing finger bore a claw and the body was more flexible. Similarly, it had a full set of relatively unspecialised teeth, similar to those of a modern shrew. Its anatomy suggests that, like modern bats, Icaronycteris slept while hanging upside down, holding onto a tree branch or stone ridge with its hind legs.[6]

Phylogeny

According to Simmons & Geisler 1998,[7] Icaronycteris is the first genus, followed by Archaeonycteris, Hassianycetris, and Palaeochiropteryx, in a series leading to extant microchiropteran bats.[8]

      ←      
             

Megachiroptera


             
             

Icaronycteris


             
             

Archaeonycteris


             
             
             

Palaeochiropteryx


             

Microchiroptera (Echolocating bats)







[9]

See also

References

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 Gunnell & Simmons 2005, Fossil Bats, p. 214
  2. Jepsen 1966
  3. Simmons & Geisler 1998, p. 40[not in citation given]
  4. Smith et al. 2007, Abstract
  5. The name relates the mythic flight of Icarus to Nycteris, the genus of "hollow-faced bats".
  6. Palmer 1999, p. 211
  7. Simmons & Geisler 1998, Abstract
  8. Simmons & Conway 1998, Discussion of Phylogenetic Relationships
  9. Simmons & Conway 1998

Sources

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Further reading

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