Copy reference, caption or embed code
- Vulnerability of Southern Hemisphere bats to white‐nose syndrome based on global analysis of fungal host specificity and cave temperatures
![Phylogenetic reconstruction of 782 bat species from Shi and Rabosky (2015) (branches, color grouped by family; solid branches, suborder Yangochiroptera; dashed branches, suborder Yinpterochiroptera; inner first ring, hemisphere in which bats occur; second ring, whether species roosts primarily in caves; third ring, whether winter hibernation has been studied for this species in the wild; outer forth ring, whether the species has been tested and recorded as positive for Pd [red] or as negative for Pd [gray]; outer lines circling tree, 6 most diverse bat families). Bat silhouettes for families obtained from PhyloPic 2.0 (https://www.phylopic.org/).](https://www.researchgate.net/publication/384931477/figure/fig1/AS:11431281339338611@1743497340136/Phylogenetic-reconstruction-of-782-bat-species-from-Shi-and-Rabosky-2015-branches_Q320.jpg)
Phylogenetic reconstruction of 782 bat species from Shi and Rabosky (2015) (branches, color grouped by family; solid branches, suborder Yangochiroptera; dashed branches, suborder Yinpterochiroptera; inner first ring, hemisphere in which bats occur; second ring, whether species roosts primarily in caves; third ring, whether winter hibernation has been studied for this species in the wild; outer forth ring, whether the species has been tested and recorded as positive for Pd [red] or as negative for Pd [gray]; outer lines circling tree, 6 most diverse bat families). Bat silhouettes for families obtained from PhyloPic 2.0 (https://www.phylopic.org/).
Reference
Caption
Embed code