Ultrastructural Hair Morphology: a Supplemental Tool for Species Recognition in Bats

The ultrastructural hair morphology of 09 insectivorous bats such as , , , , , , , and were examined through scanning electron microscope to validate the use of hair characteristics as supplemental taxonomic tools for species recognition. The results suggest that the hair characteristics such as sca...

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Veröffentlicht in:Zoological Studies 2016-01, Vol.55, p.1-11-025
Hauptverfasser: Kumar, Mukesh, Priya, Yuvana S, Mathur, Virendra, Kumar, Harendra, Elangovan, Vadamalai
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The ultrastructural hair morphology of 09 insectivorous bats such as , , , , , , , and were examined through scanning electron microscope to validate the use of hair characteristics as supplemental taxonomic tools for species recognition. The results suggest that the hair characteristics such as scale cuticle, divergence from the shaft and degree of hastateness varied among different species of bats. The coronal divergent scale was found in , , , and while coronal divaricate scale was found in and . However, imbricate type of scale was found in , and with different degree of hastateness among them. The different types of hastateness found among these insectivorous bats include unequal hastate, equal hastate, alternate, elongate, rounded, simple, denticulate, acuminate and cusped. The hair characteristics such as hair length, scale length, scale width, scale index and width index differed among different species. However, there was no difference in the structure of scales among dorsal, ventral and neck hairs. The ultrastructural diverseness in the hair morphology of different insectivorous species suggests that the structural features of hairs could be used for species recognition.
ISSN:1021-5506
1810-522X
DOI:10.6620/ZS.2016.55-25