Data from: Bayesian hierarchical models suggest oldest known plant-visiting bat was omnivorous
The earliest record of plant visiting in bats dates to the Middle Miocene of La Venta, the world's most diverse tropical palaeocommunity. Palynephyllum antimaster is known from molars that indicate nectarivory. Skull length, an important indicator of key traits such as body size, bite force and...
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Zusammenfassung: | The earliest record of plant visiting in bats dates to the Middle Miocene
of La Venta, the world's most diverse tropical palaeocommunity.
Palynephyllum antimaster is known from molars that indicate nectarivory.
Skull length, an important indicator of key traits such as body size, bite
force and trophic specialization, remains unknown. We developed Bayesian
models to infer skull length based on dental measurements. These models
account for variation within and between species, variation between
clades, and phylogenetic error structure. Models relating skull length to
trophic level for nectarivorous bats were then used to infer the diet of
the fossil. The skull length estimate for Palynephyllum places it among
the larger lonchophylline bats. The inferred diet suggests Palynephyllum
fed on nectar and insects, similar to its living relatives. Omnivory has
persisted since the mid-Miocene. This is the first study to corroborate
with fossil data that highly specialized nectarivory in bats requires an
omnivorous transition. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.1168f |