Two New Cryptic Bat Species within the Myotis nattereri Species Complex (Vespertilionidae, Chiroptera) from the Western Palaearctic ...

(Uploaded by Plazi for the Bat Literature Project) The Myotis nattereri species complex consists of an entangled group of Western Palaearctic bats characterized by fringing hairs along the rear edge of their uropatagium. Some members are relatively common while others are rare but all forms are morp...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Juste, Javier, Ruedi, Manuel, Puechmaille, Sébastien J., Salicini, Irene, Ibáñez, Carlos
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2019
Subjects:
bat
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13454483
https://zenodo.org/doi/10.5281/zenodo.13454483
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.13454483
record_format openpolar
spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.13454483 2024-09-30T14:38:36+00:00 Two New Cryptic Bat Species within the Myotis nattereri Species Complex (Vespertilionidae, Chiroptera) from the Western Palaearctic ... Juste, Javier Ruedi, Manuel Puechmaille, Sébastien J. Salicini, Irene Ibáñez, Carlos 2019 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13454483 https://zenodo.org/doi/10.5281/zenodo.13454483 unknown Zenodo hash://md5/5de1f8ad1f819414d8578c75c767ec90 hash://sha256/c90a61ffc422da60ed8fb465b437aac59da928b61941060380e59cc5bd1e9198 zotero://select/groups/5435545/items/Y6R3T37N https://zotero.org/groups/5435545/items/Y6R3T37N https://linker.bio/cut:hash://md5/4ae42d6d8f73d4f6b19c1c40296f7825!/b231019-233480 hash://md5/26f7ce5dd404e33c6570edd4ba250d20 hash://md5/5de1f8ad1f819414d8578c75c767ec90 hash://sha256/c90a61ffc422da60ed8fb465b437aac59da928b61941060380e59cc5bd1e9198 zotero://select/groups/5435545/items/Y6R3T37N https://zotero.org/groups/5435545/items/Y6R3T37N https://linker.bio/cut:hash://md5/4ae42d6d8f73d4f6b19c1c40296f7825!/b231019-233480 hash://md5/26f7ce5dd404e33c6570edd4ba250d20 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1410543 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13454484 Biodiversity Mammalia Chiroptera Chordata Animalia bats bat JournalArticle ScholarlyArticle article-journal 2019 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1345448310.5281/zenodo.141054310.5281/zenodo.13454484 2024-09-02T10:15:22Z (Uploaded by Plazi for the Bat Literature Project) The Myotis nattereri species complex consists of an entangled group of Western Palaearctic bats characterized by fringing hairs along the rear edge of their uropatagium. Some members are relatively common while others are rare but all forms are morphologically very similar and their taxonomy is unresolved. Recent studies based on different molecular markers have shown that several major and unexpected lineages exist within this group of forest-dwelling bats. All the mitochondrial and nuclear markers tested to date have shown that these major lineages evolved as fully independent and coherent units and therefore each qualifies as distinct species. In the absence of proper morphological diagnosis, these lineages are informally referred to in the literature under different names. We explore here the external and craniodental variation of these lineages. Although all morphological measurements were overlapping between these lineages, we show that lineages can be ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Myotis nattereri DataCite
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language unknown
topic Biodiversity
Mammalia
Chiroptera
Chordata
Animalia
bats
bat
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Mammalia
Chiroptera
Chordata
Animalia
bats
bat
Juste, Javier
Ruedi, Manuel
Puechmaille, Sébastien J.
Salicini, Irene
Ibáñez, Carlos
Two New Cryptic Bat Species within the Myotis nattereri Species Complex (Vespertilionidae, Chiroptera) from the Western Palaearctic ...
topic_facet Biodiversity
Mammalia
Chiroptera
Chordata
Animalia
bats
bat
description (Uploaded by Plazi for the Bat Literature Project) The Myotis nattereri species complex consists of an entangled group of Western Palaearctic bats characterized by fringing hairs along the rear edge of their uropatagium. Some members are relatively common while others are rare but all forms are morphologically very similar and their taxonomy is unresolved. Recent studies based on different molecular markers have shown that several major and unexpected lineages exist within this group of forest-dwelling bats. All the mitochondrial and nuclear markers tested to date have shown that these major lineages evolved as fully independent and coherent units and therefore each qualifies as distinct species. In the absence of proper morphological diagnosis, these lineages are informally referred to in the literature under different names. We explore here the external and craniodental variation of these lineages. Although all morphological measurements were overlapping between these lineages, we show that lineages can be ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Juste, Javier
Ruedi, Manuel
Puechmaille, Sébastien J.
Salicini, Irene
Ibáñez, Carlos
author_facet Juste, Javier
Ruedi, Manuel
Puechmaille, Sébastien J.
Salicini, Irene
Ibáñez, Carlos
author_sort Juste, Javier
title Two New Cryptic Bat Species within the Myotis nattereri Species Complex (Vespertilionidae, Chiroptera) from the Western Palaearctic ...
title_short Two New Cryptic Bat Species within the Myotis nattereri Species Complex (Vespertilionidae, Chiroptera) from the Western Palaearctic ...
title_full Two New Cryptic Bat Species within the Myotis nattereri Species Complex (Vespertilionidae, Chiroptera) from the Western Palaearctic ...
title_fullStr Two New Cryptic Bat Species within the Myotis nattereri Species Complex (Vespertilionidae, Chiroptera) from the Western Palaearctic ...
title_full_unstemmed Two New Cryptic Bat Species within the Myotis nattereri Species Complex (Vespertilionidae, Chiroptera) from the Western Palaearctic ...
title_sort two new cryptic bat species within the myotis nattereri species complex (vespertilionidae, chiroptera) from the western palaearctic ...
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2019
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13454483
https://zenodo.org/doi/10.5281/zenodo.13454483
genre Myotis nattereri
genre_facet Myotis nattereri
op_relation hash://md5/5de1f8ad1f819414d8578c75c767ec90
hash://sha256/c90a61ffc422da60ed8fb465b437aac59da928b61941060380e59cc5bd1e9198
zotero://select/groups/5435545/items/Y6R3T37N
https://zotero.org/groups/5435545/items/Y6R3T37N
https://linker.bio/cut:hash://md5/4ae42d6d8f73d4f6b19c1c40296f7825!/b231019-233480
hash://md5/26f7ce5dd404e33c6570edd4ba250d20
hash://md5/5de1f8ad1f819414d8578c75c767ec90
hash://sha256/c90a61ffc422da60ed8fb465b437aac59da928b61941060380e59cc5bd1e9198
zotero://select/groups/5435545/items/Y6R3T37N
https://zotero.org/groups/5435545/items/Y6R3T37N
https://linker.bio/cut:hash://md5/4ae42d6d8f73d4f6b19c1c40296f7825!/b231019-233480
hash://md5/26f7ce5dd404e33c6570edd4ba250d20
https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1410543
https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13454484
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1345448310.5281/zenodo.141054310.5281/zenodo.13454484
_version_ 1811641227231100928