翅膀膜内肌肉的排列受整个蝙蝠群体重的影响。

4区 医学 Q2 Agricultural and Biological Sciences Anatomical Record Pub Date : 2024-10-23 DOI:10.1002/ar.25594
Alana Conceição-da-Silva, Nathália Siqueira Veríssimo Louzada, William Corrêa Tavares
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引用次数: 0

摘要

对蝙蝠飞行机制的广泛研究凸显了其翅膀结构的复杂功能和进化动态,但某些翅膀肌肉的解剖细节仍然难以捉摸。特别是位于翼板(翼板上缺乏直接关节连接的区域)内的膜内翼板肌(intramembranous plagiopatagiales proprii muscles),在不同蝙蝠家族中表现出显著的差异。这些肌肉呈大束状向前胸延伸,在飞行过程中对翅膀变硬、调节膜张力和减少翅膀弯曲起着至关重要的作用。由于体型较大的蝙蝠往往具有较高的翅膀负荷(WL;体重[BMa]与翅膀面积之比),因此可能会增加蝠翼弯曲度并导致阻力,我们假设体型会显著影响蝠翼本体肌肉的进化发展。本研究调查了新世界叶鼻蝠(Phyllostomidae)的 BMa 与 plagiopatagiales proprii 形态之间的关系,在 8 个叶鼻蝠亚科的 24 个物种中采用了二元异构、多元分析和比较系统发生学方法。我们的研究结果表明,肌肉结构具有显著的系统发育信号,肌肉面积具有正进化异构性。这表明,在大型物种中,肌肉体积会适应性地增大,这很可能是为了抵消WL的增加,减少翅膀的弯曲度,并将阻力降到最低。这项研究加深了我们对蝙蝠膜内翼肌的功能和适应性形态进化的理解,强调了它们的进化意义。
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Arrangements of intramembranous muscles of wings are influenced by body mass across the radiation of phyllostomid bats.

Extensive research into bat flight mechanisms has highlighted the complex functional and evolutionary dynamics of their wing structures, yet the anatomical details of certain wing muscles remain elusive. In particular, the intramembranous plagiopatagiales proprii muscles, located within the plagiopatagium-an area of the wing lacking direct joint connections-exhibit remarkable variation across bat families. These muscles, which extend anteroposteriorly in macroscopic bundles, play a crucial role in wing stiffening, modulating membrane tension, and reducing wing curvature during flight. Since larger bats tend to have higher wing loading (WL; the ratio of body mass [BMa] to wing area) and may therefore experience increased patagial curvature and resultant drag, we hypothesized that body size significantly influences the evolutionary development of the plagiopatagiales proprii muscles. This study investigates the relationship between BMa and the morphology of the plagiopatagiales proprii in New World leaf-nosed bats (Phyllostomidae), employing bivariate allometry, multivariate analysis, and comparative phylogenetic methods across 24 species from eight phyllostomid subfamilies. Our findings reveal a significant phylogenetic signal in muscle architecture, along with positive evolutionary allometry in muscle area. This suggests an adaptive increase in muscle size in larger species, likely to counterbalance the increased WL, reduce wing curvature, and minimize drag. This research enhances our understanding of the functional and adaptive morphological evolution of intramembranous wing muscles in phyllostomid bats, underscoring their evolutionary significance.

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来源期刊
Anatomical Record
Anatomical Record Agricultural and Biological Sciences-Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
CiteScore
4.30
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期刊介绍: The Anatomical Record
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