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Australian Journal of Biological Sciences Australian Journal of Biological Sciences Society
Biological Sciences
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Are Megabats Flying Primates? Contrary Evidence from a Mitochondrial DNA Sequence

S Bennett, LJ Alexander, RH Crozier and AG Mackinlay

Australian Journal of Biological Sciences 41(3) 327 - 332
Published: 1988

Abstract

Bats (Chiroptera) are divided into the suborders Megachiroptera (fruit bats, 'megabats') and Microchiroptera (predominantly insectivores, 'microbats'). It had been found that megabats and primates share a connection system between the retina and the midbrain not seen in microbats or other eutherian mammals, and challenging but plausible hypotheses were made that (a) bats are diphyletic and (b) megabats are flying primates. We obtained two DNA sequences from the mitochondrion of the fruit bat Pteropus poliocephalus, and performed phylogenetic analyses using the bat sequences in conjunction with homologous Drosophila, mouse, cow and human sequences. Two trees stand out as significantly more likely than any other; neither of these links the bat and human as the closest sequences. These results cast considerable doubt on the hypothesis that megabats are particularly close to primates.

https://doi.org/10.1071/BI9880327

© CSIRO 1988

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