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I'm updating my lecture for tomorrow, which covers primate evolution and human origins.
There's a group of mammals in Southeast Asia that might or might not be related to primates called Dermoptera. They're commonly known as "flying lemurs," in spite of neither being lemurs nor capable of actually flying. (They're also sometimes called colugos, and they do sorta kinda look like the love child between a lemur and a flying squirrel or sugar glider).
Anyway - one of the oldest such animals in the fossil record has a genus name that literally means "skin beast."
Consider your life enriched. Maybe you'll win a few bucks on Jeopardy someday. You're welcome.
dweller
(28,218 posts)A coat of many colugos .
🤔
GreenWave
(12,548 posts)wendyb-NC
(4,667 posts)Just kidding.
I did find that info fascinating. Thank you, cab67, for posting it.
Buzz cook
(2,877 posts)It's the dessert of the trivia banquet.
dameatball
(7,665 posts)mercuryblues
(16,355 posts)They don't fly and aren't lemurs.
cab67
(3,690 posts)or the dogs with bees in their mouths, and when they bark, they shoot bees at you.
canetoad
(20,659 posts)More of this trivia please. It looks like their distribution ends at the Wallace line, although we have flying foxes here in Oz which neither fly nor are foxes.

cab67
(3,690 posts)All bats do.
Flying lemurs glide the way a sugar glider (or, in our hemisphere, a flying squirrel) would. They have flaps of skin between the hands and feet that act like an airfoil. These generate lift, but not thrust. Flapping allows bats to generate thrust as well as lift.
I love learning this kind of thing.
eppur_se_muova
(41,703 posts)obscure points. And here is one !
I was just reminding myself that there are two living orders of sloths -- the "two-toed" and "three-toed" -- and that they're not really that closely related to each other. Strange are the ways of evolution.
Lots of weird critters that appeared, evolved for a while, and died out, without leaving much change -- and no descendants.
cab67
(3,690 posts)eppur_se_muova
(41,703 posts)Today, there are two-toed and three-toed sloths, very similar animals living in very similar environments. So most people would assume they are each others' nearest relatives. But they're only nearest surviving relatives, and the extinct family members constitute most of the history -- many dozens of extinct ground sloths ! And three-toed sloths diverged from the rest of the taxon not long after anteaters did, while two-toed sloths seem to be at the end of a long chain. That's why taxonomy based only on living relatives (as originally done by Linnaeus) led to so many, um, "misunderstandings". Linnaeus (or maybe it was Cuvier) originally lumped elephants, rhinos, and hippos together in the "Pachydermata". Now they're known to be less closely related to each other than to hyraxes, horses, and whales, respectively ! For those of us who don't specialize in such things, much of this is rather surprising, even disconcerting, news.
About twenty years ago I attended a 'general-interest' (i.e. not just for specialists, so even though a chemist, I didn't get lost in "insider" jargon) academic seminar on modern DNA analysis among living birds, and how it completely revised much of the taxonomy of birds. Large flightless birds (ostriches, emus, cassowaries, rheas) turned out not to be as closely related as thought -- apparently flightlessness evolved repeatedly among different, related lineages, so that flightless and flying birds were mixed within various taxons. Old World and New World vultures -- whose relationships were considered problematic, unknown to those of use outside ornithology -- turned out to have different lineages, another study in convergent evolution. And there was a suggestion that NW vultures descended from cranes, but this now seems to have been retracted or discarded. (Too bad I can't follow such developments in detail and still pursue my own profession.) In any case, I was much impressed with the way modern, detailed DNA analysis and cladistics (which was still something of a "new thing" when I first heard of the practice) had untangled a lot of confusion. Previously, I had considered much of the constant revision of taxonomies to be driven often by opinions as much as evidence. But here was reproducible, quantifiable evidence put to good use, and not much to argue in opposition. Quite a sea change. It makes one sorry one can't pursue multiple careers in different branches of science, just to experience all the progress that is otherwise so impressive to the specialist, and unknown "outside".