Yeah, if I am allowed to do that, I can solve any scientific mystery. Try it!
So where do you guys think bats came from?
I take it that Vern and noguru just said they don't know and/or don't care.
So where do you guys think bats came from?
I take it that Vern and noguru just said they don't know and/or don't care.
Actually as a child bats were one my first interests regarding the natural world. I started studying bats about 6 months before I developed an interest in fish and reptiles.
I thought they came from a belfry
As in bats in your belfry, streaming from the ears of kooks :chew:
You're only pushing the mystery one step back! How did they get into the belfry?
Do you have an aquarium?
The trout story was very interesting. It must've been a chore moving that 71g twice a year.
I used to breeed Tanganyikan Chichlids, but now I have an 80g with a single fish. it is about a five or six inch Balistapus undulatus.
That's a cool looking fish!
The trout story was very interesting. It must've been a chore moving that 71g twice a year.
I used to breeed Tanganyikan Chichlids, but now I have an 80g with a single fish. it is about a five or six inch Balistapus undulatus.
Here's your answer, bob.
That is a cychlid? It is difficult to see its fin structure. That is a beautiful fish.
Actually it isn't. From your link:
"Discussion of Phylogenetic Relationships
The fossil record of bats extends back at least to the early Eocene, and chiropteran fossils are known from all continents except Antarctica. Icaronycteris, Archaeonycteris, Hassianycteris, and Palaeochiropteryx, unlike most other fossil bats, have not been referred to any extant family or superfamily. These Eocene taxa are known from exceptionally well-preserved fossils, and they have long formed a basis for reconstructing the early evolutionary history of Chiroptera (see review in Simmons and Geisler, 1998).
Smith (1977) suggested that these taxa represent an extinct clade of early microchiropterans ("Palaeochiropterygoidea"). In contrast, Van Valen (1979) argued that these fossil forms are representatives of a primitive grade ancestral to both Megachiroptera and Microchiroptera ("Eochiroptera"). Novacek (1987) reanalyzed morphology of Icaronycteris and Palaeochiropterx and concluded that they are more closely related to Microchroptera than to Megachiroptera. Most recently, Simmons and Geisler (1998) found that Icaronycteris, Archaeonycteris, Hassianycteris, and Palaeochiropteryx represent a series of consecutive sister-taxa to extant microchiropteran bats."
Note that they do not identify an ancestor.
Also remember that all lifeforms, extant or fossil or extinct are of necessity a species.
So to identify an ancestor one must name the ancestral species from which the bat species in question descended from. If one cannot do this then it is best to admit that the ancestor is unknown.
No, not a cichlid. It is a saltwater fish, an Undulated Triggerfish.
So once again its the same old garbage, after all. We don't have a road map of the bat's development with all species taxonomically recorded, therefore it didn't develop at all and "goddidit" once again. Astonishing.
Here's some fossil bats to whet your appetite.
http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/mammal/eutheria/chirofr.html
As expected your link says nothing about ancestors of the bat.
"Chiroptera: Fossil Record
Although bats are one of the most diverse groups of mammals today, they are one of the least common groups in the fossil record. Bats have small, light skeletons that do not preserve well. Also, many live in tropical forests, where conditions are usually unfavorable for the formation of fossils. Thus we know little about the early evolution of bats.
Some mammal teeth from the Paleocene of France show characters of both bats and insectivores (the group including the hedgehogs, shrews and moles of today).
However, since these fossils are only teeth, we don't know what the rest of the animal was like. The next bat fossils start turning up in the Eocene, in sites with unusually complete preservation of whole skeletons, such as the Green River Formation of Wyoming and the Messel Shale of Germany. These fossils represent essentially modern-looking microchiropterans; bats had evolved all of their characteristic features and begun to diversify by this time. In fact, the oldest known complete fossil bat, the Eocene-age Icaronycteris shown at left, shows specializations of the auditory region of the skull that suggest that this bat could echolocate.
The oldest megachiropteran (flying fox, or fruitbat) is Oligocene in age, from Italy; it and a Miocene fossil from Africa make up the entire known fossil record of megachiropterans."
Um, :duh:, but the fossilized bats ARE ancestral. It shows that the ancestral forms were insectivores. What are you expecting it to say about them? You don't want answers, so why do you ask questions?