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THE INTERNAL NASAL SKELETON OF THE BAT PTEROPUS LYLEI K. ANDERSEN, 1908 (CHIROPTERA: PTEROPODIDAE)

期刊

ANNALS OF CARNEGIE MUSEUM
卷 81, 期 1, 页码 1-17

出版社

CARNEGIE MUSEUM NATURAL HISTORY
DOI: 10.2992/007.081.0101

关键词

Chiroptera; computed tomography; ethmoid; nasal capsule; Pteropus; turbinals

资金

  1. AMNH
  2. CONICET Argentina [PICT-2008-1798]
  3. NSF [AToL DEB-0629811, AToL-0531767]
  4. Kalbfleisch/Lincoln Ellsworth Research Fellowship at AMNH through the Department of Mammalogy
  5. R.K. Mellon North American Mammal Research Institute (Carnegie Museum of Natural History)
  6. National Science Foundation ATOL [0629959]
  7. American Museum of Natural History
  8. Division Of Earth Sciences
  9. Directorate For Geosciences [0948842] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  10. Division Of Environmental Biology
  11. Direct For Biological Sciences [0629959, 0946430] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The cranial osteology of the megachiropteran Pteropus Brisson, 1762, was the subject of recent study that covered all of the skull bones in significant detail, except for the anatomy of the nasal capsule. Here, we describe and illustrate the internal nasal skeleton of Pteropus lylei K. Andersen, 1908, using histological sections of a fetus and high resolution X-ray computed tomographic (HRXCT) imagery of an adult specimen. The internal nasal skeleton of Pteropus lacks a rostral nasoturbinal and includes a caudal nasoturbinal that corresponds to the ossified crista semicircularis of the fetus; three endoturbinals; one ectoturbinal; the maxilloturbinal; and a low basal crest that may represent a rudimentary element. We describe in detail the structure and connections of these elements in Pteropus. The maxilloturbinal is the largest element. In cross section, the caudal nasoturbinal is unilaminar, the maxilloturbinal is double bilaminar (i.e., each of the basal twin laminae splits further into two secondary laminae), and the other elements range from incipient to asymmetrically double bilaminar (i.e., one branch simple, the other split). turbinals of the ethmoidal labyrinth contribute to the cribriform plate, creating a specific pattern of cribriform foramina. The elements found in Pteropus are compared with those of other well-known mammals with relatively few turbinal elements, including other bats, primates, canids, and marsupials. We show that, despite terminological discrepancies across studies, homologies are straightforward to establish among these taxa and so comparative or phylogenetic studies may benefit from inclusion of turbinal characters.

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