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Relative size of hearts and lungs of small bats

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TLDR
It is confirmed that bats have the largest relative heart and lung size of all mammals and that small bats compensate the energetic cost of flight mainly by changes in cardiovascular morphology.
Abstract
We estimated the heart and lung size of several species of small bats (Tadarida brasiliensis, Mormopterus kalinowski, Myotis chiloensis, Histiotus macrotus, H. montanus, Lasiurus borealis and L. cinereus) and compared these values to those of bats of larger size and other mammals. Our results confirmed that bats have the largest relative heart and lung size of all mammals. This is associated with the high energetic costs of flight. As expected, the mass-specific lung and heart sizes of small bats were larger than those of large bats. However, although relative heart mass decreased according to body mass, Mb−0.21, lung volume was nearly isometric with body mass (exponent = 0.90). This exponent was close to unity, and between exponents reported previously (0.77 and 1.06). This suggests that small bats compensate the energetic cost of flight mainly by changes in cardiovascular morphology. The relative heart mass of both H. macrotus and H. montanus was particularly large, representing 1.71 and 2.18% ...

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Design of the mammalian respiratory system. V. Scaling morphometric pulmonary diffusing capacity to body mass: wild and domestic mammals

TL;DR: It is concluded that large animals require a larger pulmonary diffusing capacity to transfer oxygen at the same rate from air to blood.
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Climatic adaptation and the evolution of basal and maximum rates of metabolism in rodents.

TL;DR: The hypothesis that variation in environmental factors leads to variation in the selective regime for metabolic rates of rodents is supported, and the causes of a positive association between BMR and latitude remain obscure.
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What it takes to fly: the structural and functional respiratory refinements in birds and bats.

TL;DR: The attainment of flight is a classic paradigm of the remarkable adaptability inherent in organismal and organic biology for countering selective pressures by initiating elegant morphologies and physiologies.
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Diet, phylogeny, and basal metabolic rate in phyllostomid bats

TL;DR: In this analysis, which assumes that all species evolved simultaneously from a single ancestor (i.e., a "star" phylogeny), diet exerted a strong effect on mass-independent BMR: nectarivorous bats showed higher mass- independent BMR than other bats feeding on fruits, insects or blood.
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Blood oxygen transport and organ weights of small bats and small non-flying mammals.

TL;DR: The results indicate that the higher specific oxygen uptake of flying bats compared to exercising non-flying mammals is mainly enabled by larger hearts and larger blood oxygen capacities.
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