Abstract

Unlike birds and insects, bats fly with wings composed of thin skin that envelops the bones of the forelimb and spans the area between the limbs, digits, and sometimes the tail. This skin is complex and unusual; it is thinner than typical mammalian skin and contains organized bundles of elastin and embedded skeletal muscles. These elements are likely responsible for controlling the shape of the wing during flight and contributing to the aerodynamic capabilities of bats. We examined the arrangement of two macroscopic architectural elements in bat wings, elastin bundles and wing membrane muscles, to assess the diversity in bat wing skin morphology. We characterized the plagiopatagium and dactylopatagium of 130 species from 17 families of bats using cross-polarized light imaging. This method revealed structures with distinctive relative birefringence, heterogeneity of birefringence, variation in size, and degree of branching. We used previously published anatomical studies and tissue histology to identify birefringent structures, and we analyzed their architecture across taxa. Elastin bundles, muscles, neurovasculature, and collagenous fibers are present in all species. Elastin bundles are oriented in a predominantly spanwise or proximodistal direction, and there are five characteristic muscle arrays that occur within the plagiopatagium, far more muscle than typically recognized. These results inform recent functional studies of wing membrane architecture, support the functional hypothesis that elastin bundles aid wing folding and unfolding, and further suggest that all bats may use these architectural elements for flight. All species also possess numerous muscles within the wing membrane, but the architecture of muscle arrays within the plagiopatagium varies among families. To facilitate present and future discussion of these muscle arrays, we refine wing membrane muscle nomenclature in a manner that reflects this morphological diversity. The architecture of the constituents of the skin of the wing likely plays a key role in shaping wings during flight.

Highlights

  • Norberg UM, and Rayner JMV (1987) Ecological morphology and flight in bats (Mammalia; Chiroptera): wing adaptations, flight performance, foraging strategy and echolocation

  • Bats are the second-most diverse mammalian order; species range in body mass size over three orders of magnitude (2g to more than 1kg), and vary in diet, habitat, wing morphology, and kinematics (Fenton and Simmons 2014)

  • We examined traits related to mechanical function, such as presence/absence, orientation, number, and size of muscles and elastin bundles because these traits impact mechanical function

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Summary

Authors contributed equally on this project

Bats fly with wings composed of thin skin that envelops the bones of the forelimb and spans the area between the limbs, digits, and sometimes the tail This skin is complex and unusual; it is thinner than typical mammalian skin and contains organized bundles of elastin and embedded skeletal muscles. Bats are the second-most diverse mammalian order; species range in body mass size over three orders of magnitude (2g to more than 1kg), and vary in diet, habitat, wing morphology, and kinematics (Fenton and Simmons 2014) Variation in these traits may place substantially different aerodynamic demands on the wings and wing skin We aim to develop standard nomenclature for the structural features of the wing membrane, to facilitate ongoing research and improve the abilities of scholars to communicate clearly concerning the many important structures observed in diverse variations within bat wings

Bats and tissue
Differentiating fiber populations
Wing membrane architecture
Muscle nomenclature
Polarized light validation
Plagiopatagiales proprii
Framework for future studies
Findings
Morphologie Der Tiere
Full Text
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