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Randall Brown (1967)
BACULA OF SOME NEW WORLD MOLOSSID BATS, 31
W. Hamilton (1949)
The bacula of some North American vespertilionid bats.Journal of mammalogy, 30 2
by Randall E. BROWN, Hugh H. GENOWAYS and J. KNOX JONES, Jr. Les auteurs ont rechercha la prosence d'un baculum chez 56 espaces de chauves-souris appartenant a 5 famüles difforentes. Les Noctilionidos et les Phyllostomatidos (sensu lato} examines n'ont pas d'os ponien mais on rencontre cet os chez tontes les especes e"tiidi£es des Emballonuride's, Natalidos et Vespertilionidos. Les bacula de 7 Emballonurid^s, d'un Natalidd et de 7 Yespertilionidos sont figure's et brievement docrits. Bacular morphology long has interested mammalogists and has proved useful taxonomically in many mammalian groups. Some species or groups of mammals lack bacula and this fact, too, has been of aid in documenting relationships (or lack of them), particularly among higher taxa. Some chiropteran bacula have been studied (see Brown, 1967, for review of the pertinent literature), but among New World bats few data have been published on other than temperate species. In the course of recent studies of the bacula of New World molossids (Brown, op. cit.), we took the opportunity to clear and stain the penes of a number of Neotropical species of other chiropteran families in search of comparative material. While preliminary in nature, this survey resulted in considerable evidence relating to
Mammalia - International Journal of the Systematics, Biology and Ecology of Mammals – de Gruyter
Published: Jan 1, 1971
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