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Extreme tongue: bat excels at saying 'aah'.


The new mammalian champ for sticking out its tongue is a small bat from the Andes.

The tube-lipped nectar bat The Tube-lipped Nectar Bat (Anoura fistulata) is a bat from Ecuador which was first described in 2005.[1] The bat has the longest tongue (8.5 cm) relative to its body size of any mammal; its tongue is 150% the size of its overall body length.  zaps out a skinny tongue that can extend a distance 1.5 times its body length, reports Nathan Muchhala of the University of Miami This article is about the university in Coral Gables, Florida. For the university in Oxford, Ohio, see Miami University.

The University of Miami (also known as Miami of Florida,[2] UM,[3] or just The U
 in Coral Gables, Fla. He says that among all vertebrates, only chameleons can top that, reaching out their tongues to twice their body length.

The nocturnal bat's tongue extends from an attachment point within the animal's ribcage ribcage
Noun

the bony structure formed by the ribs that encloses the lungs
. Tongues of most animals arise just at the back of their jaws.

Muchhala was studying pollination pollination, transfer of pollen from the male reproductive organ (stamen or staminate cone) to the female reproductive organ (pistil or pistillate cone) of the same or of another flower or cone.  in cloud forests in the Ecuadorian Andes when he realized that one of the species of nectar-sipping bats that he had netted hadn't been described by scientists. Last year, Muchhala and his colleagues named it Anoura fistulata.

Among its unusual features is a long, pointy lower lip with a groove in it. At a flower, the tongue shoots out along the groove and then retracts several times within half a second.

To measure tongue extension, Muchhala encouraged bats to sip sugar water from drinking straws. He started with test tubes but switched when the small, agile bats plunged in up to their shoulders. Other local nectar bats reached down 4 cm. The new species more than doubled that depth, Muchhala reports in the Dec. 7 Nature. "I was amazed," he says.

By studying newly identified museum specimens, Muchhala found that the prodigious tongue attaches within a tube of tissue that originates in the bat's chest between the sternum sternum: see rib.  and the heart and extends to the back of the mouth. Circular muscles within the tongue tighten to rapidly increase its length.

Some of the pollen grains that Muchhala collected from the bats' fur came from Centropogon nigricans, a pale-green, trumpet-shaped flower. Nectar collects at the bottom of these blossoms, which average about the length of the tube-lipped bat's tongue extension.

When Muchhala videotaped such flowers, day and night, for more than a week, bats were the only visitors. He never found the flower's pollen on other bat species, so he proposes that only tube-lipped bats pollinate pol·li·nate also pol·len·ate  
tr.v. pol·li·nat·ed also pol·len·at·ed, pol·li·nat·ing also pol·len·at·ing, pol·li·nates also pol·len·ates
To transfer pollen from an anther to the stigma of (a flower).
 that flower.

Other tropical plants cater to single pollinators, notes Scott Mori of the New York Botanical Garden For the botanical garden in Queens, see .
The New York Botanical Garden is a prestigious botanical garden in New York City. One of the premier botanical gardens in the United States, it spans some 240 acres of Bronx Park in the borough of The Bronx and is home to some of the
. Those flowers tend to be more specialized than their pollinators, which will visit other flowers after their private nectar reserves have been depleted.

Bat systematist Nancy Simmons of the American Museum of Natural History American Museum of Natural History, incorporated in New York City in 1869 to promote the study of natural science and related subjects. Buildings on its present site were opened in 1877.  in New York City New York City: see New York, city.
New York City

City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S.
 welcomes the report of the new tongue structure as "a fabulous discovery." She says that anteaters are the only other animals that she knows to have tongues in their chests. Other observers have reported that scaly anteaters extend their tongues about 50 percent of their body length.

The anteaters' supertongues probe ant nests, which present a problem similar to that posed by deep flowers. Simmons says that the anteaters and bats independently evolved tongues that met that challenge.
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Article Details
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Title Annotation:This Week
Author:Milius, S.
Publication:Science News
Date:Dec 9, 2006
Words:486
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