Abstract

Paleontological and molecular evidence have been employed to suggest that flying lemurs (Dermoptera) and primates form a monophyletic group, in sharp contrast with cranial and postcranial evidence indicating sister group relationships between flying lemurs and bats (Chiroptera). New evidence from the epidermis of the volar pads of primates, tree shrews, flying lemurs, bats, and other mammals was examined and mapped on to various hypotheses of archontan relationships. The micro-anatomy of the skin on the palm and sole of flying lemurs and bats differs fundamentally from that of tree shrews (Scandentia) and primates. The volar skin of flying lemurs and bats lacks the serial arrangement of papillary ridges and grooves ("fingerprints") found in primates, tree shrews, and many other mammals. Moreover, the junction between the epidermis and dermis in flying lemurs and bats is relatively flat and shows little or no development of the internal ridges that occur in primates and tree shrews. When mapped on to a set of cladograms of mammals currently allocated to the superorder Archonta, this new evidence does not support sister group relationships between flying lemurs and primates, regardless of the volar skin morphology that characterized the last common ancestor of Archonta. Micro-anatomical differences that distinguish the volar skin of flying lemurs and bats from that of primates and tree shrews reflect a profound dichotomy in the functional roles fulfilled by the extremities, which could be significant in a phylogenetic context.

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