4.8 Article

Evolution of inner ear neuroanatomy of bats and implications for echolocation

Journal

NATURE
Volume 602, Issue 7897, Pages 449-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-021-04335-z

Keywords

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Funding

  1. UChicago Metcalf Fellowship
  2. NSF
  3. AMNH
  4. Postdoctoral Fellowships from NSF
  5. University of Illinois
  6. Field Museum Brown Mammal Research Fund
  7. JRS Biodiversity Foundation
  8. UChicago Biological Sciences Division

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Phylogenomics of bats suggests that their echolocation either evolved separately in the bat suborders Yinpterochiroptera and Yangochiroptera, or had a single origin in bat ancestors and was later lost in some yinpterochiropterans. The observation of highly derived structures of the spiral ganglion in yangochiropteran bats suggests a neuroanatomical evolutionary driver for their diverse echolocating strategies. These features are highly variable across major clades and may be associated with the explosive diversification of yangochiropterans.
Phylogenomics of bats suggests that their echolocation either evolved separately in the bat suborders Yinpterochiroptera and Yangochiroptera, or had a single origin in bat ancestors and was later lost in some yinpterochiropterans(1-6). Hearing for echolocation behaviour depends on the inner ear, of which the spiral ganglion is an essential structure. Here we report the observation of highly derived structures of the spiral ganglion in yangochiropteran bats: a trans-oticganglion with a wall-less Rosenthal's canal. This neuroanatomical arrangement permits a larger ganglion with more neurons, higher innervation density of neurons and denser clustering of cochlear nerve fascicles(7-13). This differs from the plesiomorphic neuroanatomy of Yinpterochiroptera and non-chi ropteran mammals. The osteological correlates of these derived ganglion features can now be traced into bat phylogeny, providing direct evidence of how Yangochiroptera differentiated from Yinpterochiroptera in spiral ganglion neuroanatomy. These features are highly variable across major clades and between species of Yangochiroptera, and in morphospace, exhibit much greater disparity in Yangochiroptera than Yinpterochiroptera. These highly variable ganglion features may be a neuroanatomical evolutionary driver for their diverse echolocating strategies(4,14-17) and are associated with the explosive diversification of yangochiropterans, which include most bat families, genera and species.

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