The calcar varies widely among bats. It can be as small as , or longer than . In some species of bat, the calcar is very long and bladelike. Examples of this include species in the genera
Noctilio and
Diclidurus. In other species, the calcar is very small or absent, such as the
Kitti's hog-nosed bat or species in the genera
Rhinopoma,
Diaemus,
Mystacina,
Syconycteris,
Harpyionycteris, and
Notopterus. In the
hairy-legged vampire bat, the calcar has a unique, finger-like form that extends approximately beyond the edge of the uropatagium. For species in some genera (for example,
Vampyrum and
Phyllostomus), the calcar is entirely made of cartilage. In other genera (e.g.
Saccopteryx,
Pteronotus,
Molossus), the calcar is calcified. Intermediate between these two forms is when one end of the calcar is calcified, while the other is cartilaginous (e.g.
Noctilio and
Trachops). All
megabats, however, lack any calcification in their calcar. In
microbats, movement of the calcar is controlled by several muscles, including the
gastrocnemius muscle, m. calcaneocutaneous, and m. depressor ossis styliformis. M. depressor ossis styliformis
abducts the calcar towards the foot, which spreads the uropatagium. M. calcaneocutaneous works in opposition to m. depressor ossis styliformis, helping to stabilize the calcar. The gastrocnemius muscle aids in
flexion of the foot, working in conjunction with m. depressor ossis styliformis to spread the uropatagium. Unlike microbats,
megabats lack the m. calcaneocutaneous muscle for calcar control; megabats do share the other two muscles for calcar control, however. ==Function==